Abstract

Classic galactosemia (CG) results from profound deficiency of galactose‐1‐P uridylyltransferase (GALT). Despite early detection by newborn screening and lifelong dietary restriction of galactose, most patients grow to experience a range of long‐term complications. Recently, we developed and characterized a GALT‐null rat model of CG and demonstrated that AAV9‐hGALT, administered by tail vein injection to neonatal pups, dramatically improved plasma, liver, and brain galactose metabolites at 2 weeks posttreatment. Here we report a time‐course study of GALT restoration in rats treated as neonates with scAAV9‐hGALT and harvested at 8, 14, 30, and 60 days. Cohorts of rats in the two older groups were weaned to diets containing either 1% or 3% of calories from galactose. As expected, GALT activity in all treated animals peaked early and then diminished over time, most notably in liver, ostensibly due to dilution of the nonreplicating episomal vector as transduced cells divided. All treated rats showed dramatic metabolic rescue through 1 month, and those weaned to the lower galactose diet showed continued strong metabolic rescue into adulthood (2 months). Prepubertal growth delay and cataracts were both partially rescued by treatment. Finally, we found that UDP glucose pyrophosphorylase (UGP), which offers a metabolic bypass around missing GALT, was 3‐fold more active in brain samples from adult rats than from young pups, offering a possible explanation for the improved ability of older GALT‐null rats to metabolize galactose. Combined, these results document promising metabolic and phenotypic efficacy of neonatal GALT gene replacement in a rat model of classic galactosemia.

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