Adeno-Associated Virus Vector (AAV) microdystrophin gene therapy prolongs survival and restores muscle function in the canine model of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)

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Le Guiner, Caroline | Servais, Laurent | Montus, Marie | Larcher, Thibaut | Fraysse, Bodvael | Moullec, Sophie | Koo, Taeyoung | Malerba, Alberto | Le Bec, Christine | Hebben, Matthias | Masurier, Carole | Mingozzi, Federico | Adjali, Oumeya | Carlier, Pierre | Hogrel, Jean-Yves | Gjata, Bernard | Cherel, Yan | Athanasopoulos, Takis | Mavilio, Fulvio | Voit, Thomas | Moullier, Philippe | Dickson, George

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is a X-linked inherited muscle-wasting disease primarily affecting young boys with a prevalence of 1:5,000. The disease is caused by loss-of-function mutations in the gene encoding for the Dystrophin protein and is characterized by systemic, progressive, irreversible and severe loss of muscle function. Among vector systems that allow efficient in vivo gene transfer, recombinant Adeno-Associated Virus vectors (rAAV) hold great promise and allow very efficient transduction of skeletal and cardiac muscles. However, full-length dystrophin cDNA exceeds the packaging capacity for a single rAAV gene-delivery cassette. Therefore, truncated versions namely micro-dystrophins have been designed and optimized to contain few clinically important regions of the dystrophin protein. We have tested a rAAV2/8 vector encoding a sequence optimised canine micro-dystrophin transgene, driven by a muscle-synthetic Spc512 promoter (rAAV2/8-Spc512-µDys) in a total of 12 Golden Retriever Muscular Dystrophy (GRMD) dogs, the canine model of DMD. Isolated limb perfusion studies using a single administration of vector induced high levels of micro-dystrophin expression in the treated limb (up to 90% dystrophin positive fibres) with significant normalisation of histological, NMR imaging and spectroscopy parameters and muscle strength, without deleterious immune responses. Similarly, single-dose intravascular delivery of the same rAAV2/8-Spc512-µDys, in absence of immunosuppression, led to long-term transduction of distant muscle groups and extended lifespan (up to 2 years). Profound improvement of multiple clinical features was observed, including gait and respiratory parameters and no toxicity or deleterious humoral and/or cell-mediated immune responses were observed. This study demonstrates the safety and long term efficacy of rAAV2/8-Spc5.12-µDys gene therapy in a relevant large-animal models of DMD and paves the way towards human clinical gene therapy using systemic peripheral vein administration of vector, and applicable to all DMD patients regardless of their genotype.

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