The use of gene therapy for blinding disease shows growing promise; however, due to an ever-expanding list of disease-causing genes and mutations, the identification of a generic gene-based treatment is urgently needed. In many forms of degenerative retinal disease, there may be a window of opportunity to preserve daylight vision, as the cone photoreceptors degenerate more slowly than do the rods. In this issue of the
Pavitra S. Ramachandran, Ji Yun Song, Jean Bennett
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
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Reactivating the phototransduction cascade with a mutation agnostic gene therapy preserves vision in rod-cone dystrophies
Simon CJ, Khabou H, Chaffiol A, Rucli M, Finzi M, Norberg N, Grimaud A, Mücher B, Desrosiers M, Sancho S, Bonilha VL, Grieve K, Duebel J, Paques M, Picaud S, Sahel JA, Audo I, Herlitze S, Dalkara D |
iScience | 2025 |
Reliability of Mesopic Measures of Visual Acuity and Contrast Sensitivity and Their Correlation with Rod and Cone Function in Retinitis Pigmentosa
AK Bittner, MC Ferraz |
Ophthalmic Research | 2019 |
Isolated and Syndromic Retinal Dystrophy Caused by Biallelic Mutations in RCBTB1, a Gene Implicated in Ubiquitination
F Coppieters, G Ascari, K Dannhausen, K Nikopoulos, F Peelman, M Karlstetter, M Xu, C Brachet, I Meunier, MK Tsilimbaris, C Tsika, SV Blazaki, S Vergult, P Farinelli, T Van Laethem, M Bauwens, M De Bruyne, R Chen, T Langmann, R Sui, F Meire, C Rivolta, CP Hamel, BP Leroy, E De Baere |
The American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016 |