EMBO Molecular Medicine (Feb 2018)

Allele‐specific silencing therapy for Dynamin 2‐related dominant centronuclear myopathy

  • Delphine Trochet,
  • Bernard Prudhon,
  • Maud Beuvin,
  • Cécile Peccate,
  • Stéphanie Lorain,
  • Laura Julien,
  • Sofia Benkhelifa‐Ziyyat,
  • Aymen Rabai,
  • Kamel Mamchaoui,
  • Arnaud Ferry,
  • Jocelyn Laporte,
  • Pascale Guicheney,
  • Stéphane Vassilopoulos,
  • Marc Bitoun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201707988
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
pp. 239 – 253

Abstract

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Abstract Rapid advances in allele‐specific silencing by RNA interference established a strategy of choice to cure dominant inherited diseases by targeting mutant alleles. We used this strategy for autosomal‐dominant centronuclear myopathy (CNM), a rare neuromuscular disorder without available treatment due to heterozygous mutations in the DNM2 gene encoding Dynamin 2. Allele‐specific siRNA sequences were developed in order to specifically knock down the human and murine DNM2‐mRNA harbouring the p.R465W mutation without affecting the wild‐type allele. Functional restoration was achieved in muscle from a knock‐in mouse model and in patient‐derived fibroblasts, both expressing the most frequently encountered mutation in patients. Restoring either muscle force in a CNM mouse model or DNM2 function in patient‐derived cells is an essential breakthrough towards future gene‐based therapy for dominant centronuclear myopathy.

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