Out of three mutations in the dystrophin gene that cause Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the most common, serious childhood muscle wasting disease, two are genomic deletions of one or more exons that disrupt the reading frame. Specific removal of an exon flanking a genomic deletion using antisens
Exon skipping-mediated dystrophin reading frame restoration for small mutations
✍ Scribed by Pietro Spitali; Paola Rimessi; Marina Fabris; Daniela Perrone; Sofia Falzarano; Matteo Bovolenta; Cecilia Trabanelli; Lara Mari; Elena Bassi; Sylvie Tuffery; Francesca Gualandi; Nadir M. Maraldi; Patrizia Sabatelli-Giraud; Alessandro Medici; Luciano Merlini; Alessandra Ferlini
- Book ID
- 102264849
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 318 KB
- Volume
- 30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Exon skipping using antisense oligonucleotides (AONs) has successfully been used to reframe the mRNA in various Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients carrying deletions in the DMD gene. In this study we tested the feasibility of the exon skipping approach for patients with small mutations in in-frame exons. We first identified 54 disease-causing point mutations. We selected five patients with nonsense or frameshifting mutations in exons 10, 16, 26, 33, and 34. Wild-type and mutation specific 2 0 OMePS AONs were tested in cell-free splicing assays and in cultured cells derived from the selected patients. The obtained results confirm cell-free splicing assay as an alternative system to test exon skipping propensity when patients' cells are unavailable. In myogenic cells, similar levels of exon skipping were observed for wild-type and mutation specific AONs for exons 16, 26, and 33, whereas for exon 10 and exon 34 the efficacy of the AONs was significantly different. Interestingly, in some cases skipping efficiencies for mutated exons were quite dissimilar when compared with previous reports on the respective wild-type exons. This behavior may be related to the effect of the mutations on exon skipping propensity, and highlights the complexity of identifying optimal AONs for skipping exons with small mutations.
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