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Grant - Winter 2017 - DMD – James Novak, Ph.D.

James Novak, postdoctoral associate at Children’s Research Institute, Children’s National Health System in Washington, D.C., was awarded an MDA development grant totaling $180,000 over three years to examine why exon skipping drugs are most effective at getting to muscles that are actively undergoing repair. The work, co-funded by the Hearst Foundation, is expected to help optimize the effectiveness of exon skipping therapies in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD).
DMD is characterized by muscle degeneration, inflammation and fibrosis (scarring), resulting from mutations in the dystrophin gene that inhibit production of dystrophin protein.
Exon skipping, a promising therapeutic strategy for DMD, employs antisense oligonucleotides to permit the production of shortened but partially functional dystrophin protein. However, challenges including limited drug uptake and variable dystrophin restoration have been barriers in clinical testing.
Understanding the mechanisms that impinge on drug delivery is crucial to improving efficacy and advancing next-generation therapies.
Novak and colleagues have shown that exon skipping drugs are best able to get into muscle cells that are undergoing repair. Now the team will investigate muscle regeneration and inflammation as therapeutic targets to improve delivery of exon skipping drugs. Investigation of antisense delivery into different mouse models with differing pathologies is expected to delineate factors and define mechanisms that regulate exon skipping.
If successful, Novak’s work will clarify the disease processes that contribute to efficient delivery and efficacy of leading antisense agents and help to make this promising therapeutic strategy for Duchenne more effective.
Funding for this MDA development grant began Feb. 1, 2017.
Grantee: James Novak, Ph.D.
Grant type: Development Grant
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