Abstract

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a neuromuscular disease characterized by progressive weakness of the skeletal and cardiac muscles. This X-linked disorder is caused by open reading frame disrupting mutations in the DMD gene, resulting in strong reduction or complete absence of dystrophin protein. In order to use dystrophin as a supportive or even surrogate biomarker in clinical studies on investigational drugs aiming at correcting the primary cause of the disease, the ability to reliably quantify dystrophin expression in muscle biopsies of DMD patients pre- and post-treatment is essential. Here we demonstrate the application of the ProteinSimple capillary immunoassay (Wes) method, a gel- and blot-free method requiring less sample, antibody and time to run than conventional Western blot assay. We optimized dystrophin quantification by Wes using 2 different antibodies and found it to be highly sensitive, reproducible and quantitative over a large dynamic range. Using a healthy control muscle sample as a reference and α-actinin as a protein loading/muscle content control, a panel of skeletal muscle samples consisting of 31 healthy controls, 25 Becker Muscle dystrophy (BMD) and 17 DMD samples was subjected to Wes analysis. In healthy controls dystrophin levels varied 3 to 5-fold between the highest and lowest muscle samples, with the reference sample representing the average of all 31 samples. In BMD muscle samples dystrophin levels ranged from 10% to 90%, with an average of 33% of the healthy muscle average, while for the DMD samples the average dystrophin level was 1.3%, ranging from 0.7% to 7% of the healthy muscle average. In conclusion, Wes is a suitable, efficient and reliable method for quantification of dystrophin expression as a biomarker in DMD clinical drug development.

Highlights

  • Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a neuromuscular disease that affects 1 in 5000–6000 newborn boys [1,2] and is characterized by progressive weakness of the skeletal and cardiac muscles, respiratory failure and death in early adulthood [2,3]

  • The DMD sample used for spiking contained some trace dystrophin: This ‘0% spiked’ sample showed a dystrophin level of about 0.5% of control sample (CTRL) with a coefficient of variation (CV; standard deviation/average) between 3 experiments of 15%, which means that the lower limit of detection (LLOD) and lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) are equal or lower than 0.5% of CTRL

  • To support the use of dystrophin as biomarker in clinical studies on investigational drugs aiming at dystrophin restoration in DMD patients, we have developed a quantitative method based on the ProteinSimple capillary immunoassay (Wes)

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Summary

Introduction

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a neuromuscular disease that affects 1 in 5000–6000 newborn boys [1,2] and is characterized by progressive weakness of the skeletal and cardiac muscles, respiratory failure and death in early adulthood [2,3]. This X-linked disorder is caused by mutations in the DMD gene which codes for dystrophin, a large 427 kDa protein critical for sarcolemmal integrity and with an important role in intracellular signaling [4,5]. Mutations that conserve the reading frame lead to a shorter dystrophin protein typically lacking part of the central rod domain region and underlie the milder Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) [7,8,9]

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