| Literature DB >> 35039091 |
Sujatha Jagannathan1, Jessica C de Greef2, Lawrence J Hayward3, Kyoko Yokomori4, Davide Gabellini5, Karlien Mul6, Sabrina Sacconi7, Jamshid Arjomand8, June Kinoshita8, Scott Q Harper9.
Abstract
Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is the second most common genetic myopathy, characterized by slowly progressing and highly heterogeneous muscle wasting with a typical onset in the late teens/early adulthood [1]. Although the etiology of the disease for both FSHD type 1 and type 2 has been attributed to gain-of-toxic function stemming from aberrant DUX4 expression, the exact pathogenic mechanisms involved in muscle wasting have yet to be elucidated [2-4]. The 2021 FSHD International Research Congress, held virtually on June 24-25, convened over 350 researchers and clinicians to share the most recent advances in the understanding of the disease mechanism, discuss the proliferation of interventional strategies and refinement of clinical outcome measures, including results from the ReDUX4 trial, a phase 2b clinical trial of losmapimod in FSHD [NCT04003974].Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35039091 PMCID: PMC8762812 DOI: 10.1186/s13395-022-00287-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Skelet Muscle ISSN: 2044-5040 Impact factor: 4.912
Silencing mechanism, nucleic acid species, and muscle delivery systems described in session 6 of the FSHD IRC meeting. aRef 19. bRef 20. cRef 18. dUsed FM10, a previously published sequence targeting the DUX4 polyA signal. Although the PMO operates via steric hindrance, blocking polyadenylation could lead to DUX4 mRNA instability and degradation (Ref 18)
| Speaker, affiliation | DUX4 silencing mechanism | Antisense species | Conjugate/muscle delivery system |
|---|---|---|---|
| Katelyn Daman, University of Massachusetts | RNAi | siRNA | Docosanoic acid |
| Barbora Malecova, Avidity Biosciences | RNAi | siRNA | Murine TfR mAb |
| Jonathan Van Dyke, Arrowhead | RNAi | siRNA | Not specified |
| Lindsay Wallace, Nationwide Children’s Hospitala,b | RNAi | In vivo expressed microRNA | AAV6 and AAV9 gene therapy vectors |
| Linde Bouwman, Leiden University Medical Center | RNAse H | Gapmer ASO | Palmitate (C16) |
| Ngoc Lu-Nguyen, Royal Holloway Universityc | Steric hindrance | PMO | Vivo-PMO, cell penetrating guanidinium dendrimer |
| Nelson Hsia, Dyne | Steric hindranced | PMO | TfR antibody Fab fragment |