Molecular Therapy: Nucleic Acids (Mar 2022)

Benefits of therapy by dynamin-2-mutant-specific silencing are maintained with time in a mouse model of dominant centronuclear myopathy

  • Delphine Trochet,
  • Bernard Prudhon,
  • Lylia Mekzine,
  • Mégane Lemaitre,
  • Maud Beuvin,
  • Laura Julien,
  • Sofia Benkhelifa-Ziyyat,
  • Mai Thao Bui,
  • Norma Romero,
  • Marc Bitoun

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27
pp. 1179 – 1190

Abstract

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Dominant dynamin 2 (DNM2) mutations are responsible for the autosomal dominant centronuclear myopathy (AD-CNM), a rare progressive neuromuscular disorder ranging from severe neonatal to mild adult forms. We previously demonstrated that mutant-specific RNA interference is an efficient therapeutic strategy to rescue the muscle phenotype at the onset of the symptoms in the AD-CNM knockin-Dnm2R465W/+ mouse model. Our objective was to evaluate the long-term benefit of the treatment along with the disease time course. We demonstrate here that the complete rescue of the muscle phenotype is maintained for at least 1 year after a single injection of adeno-associated virus expressing the mutant-specific short hairpin RNA (shRNA). This was achieved by a maintained reduction of the mutant Dnm2 transcript. Moreover, this long-term study uncovers a pathological accumulation of DNM2 protein occurring with age in the mouse model and prevented by the treatment. Conversely, a physiological DNM2 protein decrease with age was observed in muscles from wild-type mice. Therefore, this study highlights a new potential pathophysiological mechanism linked to mutant protein accumulation and underlines the importance of DNM2 protein expression level for proper muscle function. Overall, these results strengthen the allele-specific silencing approach as a robust, safe, and efficient therapy for AD-CNM.

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