NONVIRAL, INTRAVASCULAR APPROACH
TO MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY GENE THERAPY MOVES AHEAD
TUCSON, Ariz., June 3, 2004 —
Delivering genes for a key muscle protein
via an intravascular route appears safe
and effective in mice, the Muscular
Dystrophy Association announced today
at a meeting of the American Society
of Gene Therapy in Minneapolis.
Dystrophin is a protein that stabilizes
the muscle cell membrane. It’s
missing in Duchenne
muscular dystrophy, a severe, childhood-onset
form of MD, and deficient in Becker
MD, a somewhat less severe form of the
disease that can begin in childhood
or later.
MDA grantee Jon Wolff in the Department
of Pediatrics at the Waisman Center,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, announced
the results of studies he conducted
in combination with a private biotechnology
company, Mirus, also located in Madison.
Wolff is a co-founder and chief scientific
officer of Mirus.
The researchers injected full-length,
human dystrophin genes that weren’t
encased in viruses into a leg vein in
four dystrophin-deficient mice, after
applying a tourniquet around the upper
leg of each animal to keep the injected
DNA concentrated in one area and targeted
to that region’s muscles.
The injections were made into a vein
in the direction of normal blood flow.
Encasing genes in viruses for transport
into muscles or other tissues has been
a popular approach in gene therapy experiments
for the last decade and is still an
important strategy. However, Wolff’s
“naked” DNA strategy may
be more advantageous in that it doesn’t
seem to provoke an unwanted immune response,
which sometimes occurs when viral coatings
are injected into the body.
The researchers found that 3 percent
to 15 percent of the leg muscle fibers
in the mice showed dystrophin production,
while the expected percentage of dystrophin-producing
fibers in these animals would be below
0.5 percent.
“The demonstration that genes
can be delivered safely and effectively
to many limb muscles at once is an absolutely
critical step in moving gene therapy
from the theoretical realm to that of
a realistic treatment for muscle disease,”
said Sharon Hesterlee, MDA’s director
of Research Development.
In addition to the mouse experiments
using the dystrophin gene, the team
scaled up gene delivery, using different
genes, in larger mammals and obtained
similar promising results.
“This advance will revolutionize
the treatment of many heretofore untreatable
disorders,” Wolff said. “This
is something we have been working toward
for almost 15 years, and we’re
very excited about the hope this offers
for people with muscular dystrophies.
I never thought the solution could turn
out to be this simple.”
MDA is a voluntary health agency working
to defeat more than 40 neuromuscular
diseases, including the MDs, through
programs of worldwide research, comprehensive
services, and far-reaching professional
and public health education.
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