| Literature DB >> 31988462 |
A Moretti1, L Fonteyne2, F Giesert3, P Hoppmann4, A B Meier4, T Bozoglu4, A Baehr4, C M Schneider4, D Sinnecker4, K Klett4, T Fröhlich2,5, F Abdel Rahman4, T Haufe4, S Sun4, V Jurisch4, B Kessler2,5, R Hinkel4, R Dirschinger4, E Martens4, C Jilek4, A Graf2,5, S Krebs2,5, G Santamaria4, M Kurome2,5, V Zakhartchenko2,5, B Campbell4, K Voelse6, A Wolf4, T Ziegler4, S Reichert7, S Lee4, F Flenkenthaler2,5, T Dorn4, I Jeremias6, H Blum2,5, A Dendorfer8, A Schnieke9, S Krause7, M C Walter7, N Klymiuk2,5, K L Laugwitz4, E Wolf2,5, W Wurst3,10, C Kupatt11.
Abstract
Frameshift mutations in the DMD gene, encoding dystrophin, cause Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), leading to terminal muscle and heart failure in patients. Somatic gene editing by sequence-specific nucleases offers new options for restoring the DMD reading frame, resulting in expression of a shortened but largely functional dystrophin protein. Here, we validated this approach in a pig model of DMD lacking exon 52 of DMD (DMDΔ52), as well as in a corresponding patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell model. In DMDΔ52 pigs1, intramuscular injection of adeno-associated viral vectors of serotype 9 carrying an intein-split Cas9 (ref. 2) and a pair of guide RNAs targeting sequences flanking exon 51 (AAV9-Cas9-gE51) induced expression of a shortened dystrophin (DMDΔ51-52) and improved skeletal muscle function. Moreover, systemic application of AAV9-Cas9-gE51 led to widespread dystrophin expression in muscle, including diaphragm and heart, prolonging survival and reducing arrhythmogenic vulnerability. Similarly, in induced pluripotent stem cell-derived myoblasts and cardiomyocytes of a patient lacking DMDΔ52, AAV6-Cas9-g51-mediated excision of exon 51 restored dystrophin expression and amelioreate skeletal myotube formation as well as abnormal cardiomyocyte Ca2+ handling and arrhythmogenic susceptibility. The ability of Cas9-mediated exon excision to improve DMD pathology in these translational models paves the way for new treatment approaches in patients with this devastating disease.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31988462 PMCID: PMC7212064 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-019-0738-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440