4.8 Article

Effects of systemic multiexon skipping with peptide-conjugated morpholinos in the heart of a dog model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1613203114

Keywords

Duchenne muscular dystrophy; exon skipping; peptide-conjugated morpholinos; cardiac Purkinje fibers; dystrophic dog model

Funding

  1. Health and Labor Sciences Research Grants for Translation Research [H19-Translational Research-003, H21-Clinical Research-015]
  2. Health Sciences Research Grants for Research on Psychiatry and Neurological Disease and Mental Health from the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan [H18-kokoro-019]
  3. NIH
  4. Friends of Garrett Cumming Research HM Toupin Neurological Science Research
  5. Muscular Dystrophy Canada
  6. Jesse's Journey Foundation
  7. Women and Children's Health Research Institute
  8. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  9. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  10. Alberta Enterprise and Advanced Education
  11. University of Alberta
  12. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
  13. [19A-7]
  14. Medical Research Council [MC_PC_12020] Funding Source: researchfish
  15. MRC [MC_PC_12020] Funding Source: UKRI

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Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a lethal genetic disorder caused by an absence of the dystrophin protein in bodywide muscles, including the heart. Cardiomyopathy is a leading cause of death in DMD. Exon skipping via synthetic phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PMOs) represents one of the most promising therapeutic options, yet PMOs have shown very little efficacy in cardiac muscle. To increase therapeutic potency in cardiac muscle, we tested a next-generation morpholino: arginine-rich, cell-penetrating peptide-conjugated PMOs (PPMOs) in the canine X-linked muscular dystrophy in Japan (CXMDJ) dog model of DMD. A PPMO cocktail designed to skip dystrophin exons 6 and 8 was injected intramuscularly, intracoronarily, or intravenously into CXMDJ dogs. Intravenous injections with PPMOs restored dystrophin expression in the myocardium and cardiac Purkinje fibers, as well as skeletal muscles. Vacuole degeneration of cardiac Purkinje fibers, as seen in DMD patients, was ameliorated in PPMO-treated dogs. Although symptoms and functions in skeletal muscle were not ameliorated by i.v. treatment, electrocardiogram abnormalities (increased Q-amplitude and Q/R ratio) were improved in CXMDJ dogs after intracoronary or i.v. administration. No obvious evidence of toxicity was found in blood tests throughout the monitoring period of one or four systemic treatments with the PPMO cocktail (12 mg/kg/injection). The present study reports the rescue of dystrophin expression and recovery of the conduction system in the heart of dystrophic dogs by PPMO-mediated multiexon skipping. We demonstrate that rescued dystrophin expression in the Purkinje fibers leads to the improvement/prevention of cardiac conduction abnormalities in the dystrophic heart.

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