Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development (Dec 2018)

Micro-utrophin Improves Cardiac and Skeletal Muscle Function of Severely Affected D2/mdx Mice

  • Tahnee L. Kennedy,
  • Simon Guiraud,
  • Ben Edwards,
  • Sarah Squire,
  • Lee Moir,
  • Arran Babbs,
  • Guy Odom,
  • Diane Golebiowski,
  • Joel Schneider,
  • Jeffrey S. Chamberlain,
  • Kay E. Davies

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
pp. 92 – 105

Abstract

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Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an X-linked muscle-wasting disease caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene. DMD boys are wheelchair-bound around 12 years and generally survive into their twenties. There is currently no effective treatment except palliative care, although personalized treatments such as exon skipping, stop codon read-through, and viral-based gene therapies are making progress. Patients present with skeletal muscle pathology, but most also show cardiomyopathy by the age of 10. A systemic therapeutic approach is needed that treats the heart and skeletal muscle defects in all patients. The dystrophin-related protein utrophin has been shown to compensate for the lack of dystrophin in the mildly affected BL10/mdx mouse. The purpose of this investigation was to demonstrate that AAV9-mediated micro-utrophin transgene delivery can not only functionally replace dystrophin in the heart, but also attenuate the skeletal muscle phenotype in severely affected D2/mdx mice. The data presented here show that utrophin can indeed alleviate the pathology in skeletal and cardiac muscle in D2/mdx mice. These results endorse the view that utrophin modulation has the potential to increase the quality life of all DMD patients whatever their mutation. Keywords: Duchenne, utrophin, AAV, D2/mdx, cardiomyopathy, cardiac cine-MRI