杜氏肌营养不良基因治疗:迷失在翻译中?

Dongsheng Duan
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摘要

肌营养不良蛋白基因突变是杜氏肌营养不良(DMD)的病因,这是分子医学的一个里程碑。在过去的20年里,肌营养不良蛋白生物学和基因传递技术的重大进展为用基因疗法治疗DMD创造了机会。治疗营养不良小鼠取得了显著的成功。一些基因治疗策略,包括质粒转移、外显子跳跃和腺相关病毒介导的微营养不良蛋白治疗,已经进入临床试验。然而,DMD患者的治疗效果尚未实现。缩小小鼠和人类之间的差距无疑是目前DMD基因治疗面临的最紧迫的问题。与小鼠相比,缺乏肌营养不良蛋白的狗在基因和表型上与人类患者相似。犬类模型的初步基因治疗研究可能提供无法从小鼠研究中获得的关键见解。很明显,犬类DMD模型可能代表了小鼠与人类之间的重要联系。不幸的是,我们目前对营养不良犬的了解有限,疾病进展的全貌仍有待明确界定。我们也缺乏严格的结果测量(如原位力测量)来监测营养不良犬的治疗效果。毫无疑问,维持一个营养不良的狗群在技术上是要求很高的,狗研究的成本也不容低估。整个DMD社区需要精心协调努力,以充分利用宝贵的狗资源。成功的DMD基因治疗可能取决于对肌营养不良蛋白缺陷犬的有效转化研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy: Lost in translation?

Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy: Lost in translation?

A milestone of molecular medicine is the identification of dystrophin gene mutation as the cause of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Over the last 2 decades, major advances in dystrophin biology and gene delivery technology have created an opportunity to treat DMD with gene therapy. Remarkable success has been achieved in treating dystrophic mice. Several gene therapy strategies, including plasmid transfer, exon skipping, and adeno-associated virus-mediated microdystrophin therapy, have entered clinical trials. However, therapeutic benefit has not been realized in DMD patients. Bridging the gap between mice and humans is no doubt the most pressing issue facing DMD gene therapy now. In contrast to mice, dystrophin-deficient dogs are genetically and phenotypically similar to human patients. Preliminary gene therapy studies in the canine model may offer critical insights that cannot be obtained from murine studies. It is clear that the canine DMD model may represent an important link between mice and humans. Unfortunately, our current knowledge of dystrophic dogs is limited, and the full picture of disease progression remains to be clearly defined. We also lack rigorous outcome measures (such as in situ force measurement) to monitor therapeutic efficacy in dystrophic dogs. Undoubtedly, maintaining a dystrophic dog colony is technically demanding, and the cost of dog studies cannot be underestimated. A carefully coordinated effort from the entire DMD community is needed to make the best use of the precious dog resource. Successful DMD gene therapy may depend on valid translational studies in dystrophin-deficient dogs.

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