Abstract

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a devastating muscle-wasting disease that arises due to the loss of dystrophin expression, leading to progressive loss of motor and cardiorespiratory function. Four exon-skipping approaches using antisense phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PMOs) have been approved by the FDA to restore a DMD open reading frame, resulting in expression of a functional but internally deleted dystrophin protein, but in patients with single-exon duplications, exon skipping has the potential to restore full-length dystrophin expression. Cell-penetrating peptide-conjugated PMOs (PPMOs) have demonstrated enhanced cellular uptake and more efficient dystrophin restoration than unconjugated PMOs. In the present study, we demonstrate widespread PPMO-mediated dystrophin restoration in the Dup2 mouse model of exon 2 duplication, representing the most common single-exon duplication among patients with DMD. In this proof-of-concept study, a single intravenous injection of PPMO targeting the exon 2 splice acceptor site induced 45% to 68% exon 2-skipped Dmd transcripts in Dup2 skeletal muscles 15days post-injection. Muscle dystrophin restoration peaked at 77% to 87% average dystrophin-positive fibers and 41% to 51% of normal signal intensity by immunofluorescence, and 15.7% to 56.8% of normal by western blotting 15 to 30days after treatment. These findings indicate that PPMO-mediated exon skipping is a promising therapeutic strategy for muscle dystrophin restoration in the context of exon 2 duplications.

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