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ASGCT 2026: Beverly Davidson Offers Vehicle and Route for Huntington’s Disease Gene Therapy
ASGCT 2026: Beverly Davidson Offers Vehicle and Route for Huntington’s Disease Gene Therapy
BOSTON – Geneticist Beverly Davidson, PhD, received the 2026 Outstanding Achievement Award from the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy (ASGCT). Davidson is currently the chief scientific strategy officer at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and a former president of ASGCT.
Some of the research Davidson presented was conducted at a new biotech company she co-founded called Latus Bio, which earlier this month announced it had raised $97 million in a Series A round. The company develops novel AAVs to specifically target central nervous system (CNS) disorders, with a lead program in Huntington’s disease (HD).
After thanking her mentors—Bill Kelly, MD, Michael Welsh, MD, and Kathy High, MD—Davidson turned her attention to presenting new advances in engineered gene therapies. Throughout her career, she has focused on improving adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) for CNS gene therapies, with a particular emphasis now on HD. Key elements include selecting the right cargo and developing the appropriate delivery vehicle. Her goal is to scale lab research in neurons, mouse models, and non-human primates (NHPs) to treat patients, including adults with HD.
Major hurdles to tackling genetic diseases of the brain include scalability and a lack of potency, Davidson said. The search for alternative AAV serotypes to AAV2 that could target neuronal cells began back in 2000. IV administration does not provide sufficient targeting to the brain. Even AAVs that have been engineered to enter the brain from the blood have high peripheral exposure and a high cost of goods per patient, which significantly lowers scalability and impact. (In one study, liver biodistribution of AAV was many orders of magnitude higher than in the CNS.)
Davidson focused on HD, the late-onset, dominantly inherited genetic disease. The identification of the gene harboring the HD mutation in the early 1990s by a consortium of researchers was one of the biggest success stories in human genetics. Even more remarkable was the underlying disease mechanism—the expansion in exon 1 of the gene of a triplet repeat sequence (CAG) producing an abnormally long string of glutamine residues in the huntingtin protein.
The right target
One of the major challenges in devising a gene therapy for HD is ensuring that the therapeutic reaches the right network—the deep brain and cortical areas. Therapies have to reach the right circuit, and the right cells in those circuits, Davidson said. Over the years, her group has tailored AAVs for delivery to the brain, inserting peptides into exposed loops of the virion to allow for targeting and unbiased diversity for blood-to-brain delivery. Nowadays, she said, machine learning approaches can be applied for further capsid improvements.
Davidson’s CHOP lab developed a method for screening AAVs with enhanced potency for CNS therapies. After generating huge libraries containing tens of millions of novel capsids, the group performed serial enrichments to identify the most attractive capsids. After screening pools of injected capsids into two species of monkeys, a winning capsid emerged: AAV-DB-3.
Davidson’s group infused AAV-DB-3 into NHPs, looking for targeting to the putamen (base of the forebrain) and caudate regions. Those results were published in Nature Communications in 2025. “AAV-DB-3 really stood out for its ability to transduce deep layer cortical neurons that are important” in HD, Davidson said. Moreover, the results were achieved with relatively low doses and only required a single infusion per hemisphere, outperforming the widely used AAV5.
Somatic instability
With a promising delivery vehicle identified, Davidson next addressed the therapeutic strategy, which takes aim at the somatic expansion of the CAG repeat. This codon grows longer over time in certain cells in the brain, sometimes expanding to hundreds of repeats.
MSH3 is a DNA repair protein that is required for CAG repeat expansions, as seen in mouse models of HD and other triplet repeat disorders, including myotonic dystrophy. Research led by Paul Ranum, PhD, who is a co-founder of Latus Bio, posted in a preprint on bioRxiv earlier this year, modeled the impact of lowering levels of MSH3 on somatic instability.
Ranum and colleagues used an artificial microRNA showed to lower MSH3 levels in NHPs by 48-94 percent. Computational modeling suggests that this would reduce somatic instability and delay onset of HD symptoms by many years. Early studies using a well-known HD mouse model, the Q111 mouse, to assess biodistribution, quantify knockdowns, and assess the impact on somatic CAG repeat expansion. AAV-DB-3 expression is highest in the striatum and cortex at 16 weeks, dropping MSH3 levels by 50%.
Davidson closed by emphasizing the need to ensure scalability for treatment beyond ultra-rare disorders. Latus hopes to file an Investigational New Drug application for its HD therapy, LTS-201, in the second half of 2026. At least two other biotech companies are also targeting MSH3 by other means.
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Hantavirus One-Shot mRNA Vaccine Fully Protects in Syrian Hamster Model
Last month, the Andes virus outbreak on a Dutch cruise ship departing from Argentina brought a transmission context for hantavirus, that was previously unprecedented, to the forefront. The Andes virus is the only member of the hantavirus family that is capable of efficient person-to-person spread through close contact with respiratory secretions. Other hantaviruses are typically spread through contact with infected rodents, making the Andes virus a much more significant public health threat.
While at sea, the outbreak spread among passengers and crew, infecting 13 people and killing three. The cruise passengers have since returned to their home countries, 23 in total. Because a person can carry the virus for weeks before showing any symptoms, health agencies are facing a complex challenge of identifying everyone who was exposed. There are currently no vaccines or preventive treatments approved for the virus; this travel-related outbreak brought the need for vaccine development to the forefront.
Researchers at The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) had previously developed and tested two mRNA vaccines against intramuscular Andes virus challenge in golden Syrian hamsters (“1-methylpseudouridine-modified or non-modified mRNA modalities encoding the envelope glycoproteins, Gn and Gc, in a single open reading frame.”)
When tested in the Syrian hamster model, both mRNA vaccines were efficacious in hamsters using a two-dose regimen. Recognizing that a fast-moving international outbreak doesn’t allow time for patients to wait weeks between shots, the team retested the vaccines to determine whether a single dose would be effective.
Now, a new report shares the finding that the vaccine provided full protection against the Andes hantavirus after a single dose.
This work is published in The Lancet in the paper, “Single-dose mRNA vaccines against Andes hantavirus.”
Alexander Bukreyev, PhD, head of the Laboratory of Viral Pathogenesis and Vaccine Development at UTMB, said that the group is working to fast-track these single-dose vaccines into human clinical trials.
The results exceeded expectations. When testing the vaccines in an animal model that mimics human disease, the scientists found that a single shot provided 100% protection against a lethal dose of the virus. Even when the researchers significantly lowered the dosage to a fraction of the original amount, the results remained definitive.
“Every vaccinated animal remained completely healthy and showed no symptoms or weight loss,” said Michelle Meyer, PhD, senior scientist in the Bukreyev Laboratory. “When we looked at the tissues from the vaccinated animals a month after infection, the virus was entirely gone. The vaccines triggered a powerful immune response, creating protective antibodies in as little as 14 days.”
Because the Andes virus can take a relatively long time to make a human severely ill, these fast-acting vaccines could serve a dual purpose, possibly functioning as an emergency tool for people who have already been exposed.
“If given quickly to high-risk contacts during an outbreak, such as the Andes virus situation on the cruise ship, the vaccines could theoretically jump-start their immune systems fast enough to intercept the virus—stopping it from replicating and preventing them from getting sick or spreading it further,” Bukreyev said.
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SonoThera Raises $125M to Develop Ultrasound-Mediated Genetic Medicines
Biotechnology company SonoThera has raised $125 million in an oversubscribed Series B financing round. The financing was led by Vida Ventures, with participation from ARK Invest, CureDuchenne Ventures, Leaps by Bayer, Otsuka Pharmaceutical, SymBiosis, UCB Ventures SA, Vivo Capital, and existing investors ARCH Venture Partners, Alexandria Venture Investments, Duquesne Family Office, Illumina Ventures, Johnson & Johnson Innovation – JJDC, Medical Excellence Capital, RA Capital, and Vertex Ventures HC.
SonoThera will use the funds to advance its lead programs in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) in the clinic. The funds will also support efforts to expand its pipeline of targeted redosable genetic medicines across multiple organ systems and scale its proprietary platform technologies for safe, targeted therapy delivery.
The company’s platform combines a proprietary ultrasound-mediated delivery technology dubbed RIPPLE
, with a payload engineering platform dubbed PORE
. The platforms are designed to support the development of DNA and RNA therapeutics, gene editing, and gene silencing approaches. SonoThera is using its tech to develop genetic medicines that it claims will address key limitations of conventional gene therapies including delivery challenges, payload size constraints, immune responses, safety events, and difficulties with redosing.
As Kenneth Greenberd, PhD, SonoThera’s co-founder and CEO, stated “we founded SonoThera to take a fundamentally different approach, with a platform designed to broaden the therapeutic possibilities of the field. We believe our technology has the potential to expand the range of diseases addressable by genetic medicines while enabling more precise, durable, safer, and repeatable therapies for patients.”
SonoThera has already demonstrated the targeted delivery and expression capabilities of its platform across multiple tissues, including skeletal muscle, heart, liver, kidney, adipose, and brain. It has also shown that it can deliver large payloads such as full-length dystrophin for DMD and RNA-based payloads for gene silencing applications in preclinical studies.
The company expects to initiate its first clinical trial in DMD in 2027.
Commenting on the financing, Rajul Jain, MD, managing director at Vida Ventures, said “we believe SonoThera, with its RIPPLE delivery and PORE payload engineering technologies, has the potential to unlock opportunities in diseases with significant unmet need that have been previously inaccessible to other genetic medicine approaches.”
In connection with the financing, Jain and Rakhshita Dhar, MS, vice president & head of Healthcare Venture Investments at Leaps by Bayer, have joined SonoThera’s Board of Directors.
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STAT+: Up and down the ladder: The latest comings and goings
Hired someone new and exciting? Promoted a rising star? Finally solved that hard-to-fill spot? Share the news with us, and we’ll share it with others. That’s right. Send us your changes, and we’ll find a home for them. Don’t be shy. Everyone wants to know who is coming and going.
And here is our regular feature in which we highlight a different person each week. This time around, we note that AstronauTx hired Michelle Mellion as chief medical officer. Previously, she held the same role at PepGen and EveryONE Medicines.
But all work and no play can make for a dull chief medical officer.
Hired someone new and exciting? Promoted a rising star? Finally solved that hard-to-fill spot? Share the news with us, and we’ll share it with others. That’s right. Send us your changes, and we’ll find a home for them. Don’t be shy. Everyone wants to know who is coming and going.
And here is our regular feature in which we highlight a different person each week. This time around, we note that AstronauTx hired Michelle Mellion as chief medical officer. Previously, she held the same role at PepGen and EveryONE Medicines.
But all work and no play can make for a dull chief medical officer.
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