Transplantation of human stem cell-derived neurons for retinal ganglion cell replacement and optic nerve regeneration.

NIH RePORTER · NIH · K08 · $188,442 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary / Abstract Optic neuropathy causes irreversible vision loss because humans and other mammals cannot repair the optic nerve or repopulate the nerve cells that comprise it (retinal ganglion cells or RGCs). Glaucoma, the most common optic neuropathy, is projected to affect more than 110 million people by 2040, and to cause bilateral blindness in more than 10% of them. Stem cell therapy holds great potential for treating neurodegenerative diseases that currently have no cure, including glaucoma and other optic neuropathies. By generating human RGCs in a dish and transplanting them into the eye, it might be possible to replace lost RGCs, regenerate the optic nerve, and reverse blindness from optic neuropathy. Achieving RGC replacement will require significant advances in our ability to ensure survival of transplanted cells and facilitate their communication (integration) with the visual system. Significant work is ongoing to develop methods to drive RGC nerve fiber (axon) growth towards visual centers in the brain. However, RGC survival after transplantation and communication with other neurons in the retina (i.e. bipolar and amacrine cells) are equally important and have been less well studied. Through this mentored clinician-scientist career development project, Dr. Thomas Johnson proposes to advance the field of stem cell transplantation for optic nerve regeneration by improving survival and retinal integration of transplanted human RGCs. To so, he will address three specific aims: (1) Generation of novel human cell lines genetically engineered for improved survival after transplantation by targeting molecular pathways involved in RGC death and neuroprotection; (2) Determination of how optic nerve neurodegenerative disease states affect survival and integration of RGCs transplanted into the eye; and (3) Elucidation of how transplanted RGCs sense barriers to retinal integration and development of methods for overcoming these obstacles. The proposed work will address key limitations of prior translational optic nerve regeneration research by using experimental models that are more applicable to human disease, increasing the experimental rigor of transplant outcome assessments, determining which RGC subtypes are most likely to survive and integrate, and controlling for “material transfer” from transplanted cells to the recipient retina. Dr. Johnson is an early-career glaucoma specialist and neuroscientist who will conduct this project in an outstanding research environment at Johns Hopkins’ Wilmer Eye Institute, under the mentorship of an interdisciplinary team of senior investigators, including Drs. Don Zack, Harry Quigley, and Alex Kolodkin. Over five years he will acquire expertise in emerging molecular biology and neuroscience techniques required for achieving his long-term goals of: leading an independent high-impact optic nerve regeneration research laboratory, providing outstanding medical and surgical care to patients with glau...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10039636
Project number
1K08EY031801-01
Recipient
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Thomas Vincent Johnson
Activity code
K08
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$188,442
Award type
1
Project period
2020-09-30 → 2025-08-31