TY - JOUR
T1 - Author Correction
T2 - Cell-mediated exon skipping normalizes dystrophin expression and muscle function in a new mouse model of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
AU - Galli, Francesco
AU - Bragg, Laricia
AU - Rossi, Maira
AU - Proietti, Daisy
AU - Perani, Laura
AU - Bacigaluppi, Marco
AU - Tonlorenzi, Rossana
AU - Sibanda, Tendai
AU - Caffarini, Miriam
AU - Talapatra, Avraneel
AU - Santoleri, Sabrina
AU - Meregalli, Mirella
AU - Bano-Otalora, Beatriz
AU - Bigot, Anne
AU - Bozzoni, Irene
AU - Bonini, Chiara
AU - Mouly, Vincent
AU - Torrente, Yvan
AU - Cossu, Giulio
PY - 2024/10/14
Y1 - 2024/10/14
N2 - Cell therapy for muscular dystrophy has met with limited success, mainly due to the poor engraftment of donor cells, especially in fibrotic muscle at an advanced stage of the disease. We developed a cell-mediated exon skipping that exploits the multinucleated nature of myofibers to achieve cross-correction of resident, dystrophic nuclei by the U7 small nuclear RNA engineered to skip exon 51 of the dystrophin gene. We observed that co-culture of genetically corrected human DMD myogenic cells (but not of WT cells) with their dystrophic counterparts at a ratio of either 1:10 or 1:30 leads to dystrophin production at a level several folds higher than what predicted by simple dilution. This is due to diffusion of U7 snRNA to neighbouring dystrophic resident nuclei. When transplanted into NSG-mdx-Δ51mice carrying a mutation of exon 51, genetically corrected human myogenic cells produce dystrophin at much higher level than WT cells, well in the therapeutic range, and lead to force recovery even with an engraftment of only 3–5%. This level of dystrophin production is an important step towards clinical efficacy for cell therapy.
AB - Cell therapy for muscular dystrophy has met with limited success, mainly due to the poor engraftment of donor cells, especially in fibrotic muscle at an advanced stage of the disease. We developed a cell-mediated exon skipping that exploits the multinucleated nature of myofibers to achieve cross-correction of resident, dystrophic nuclei by the U7 small nuclear RNA engineered to skip exon 51 of the dystrophin gene. We observed that co-culture of genetically corrected human DMD myogenic cells (but not of WT cells) with their dystrophic counterparts at a ratio of either 1:10 or 1:30 leads to dystrophin production at a level several folds higher than what predicted by simple dilution. This is due to diffusion of U7 snRNA to neighbouring dystrophic resident nuclei. When transplanted into NSG-mdx-Δ51mice carrying a mutation of exon 51, genetically corrected human myogenic cells produce dystrophin at much higher level than WT cells, well in the therapeutic range, and lead to force recovery even with an engraftment of only 3–5%. This level of dystrophin production is an important step towards clinical efficacy for cell therapy.
U2 - 10.1038/s44321-024-00134-x
DO - 10.1038/s44321-024-00134-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 39242974
SN - 1757-4676
VL - 16
SP - 2654
JO - EMBO Molecular Medicine
JF - EMBO Molecular Medicine
IS - 10
ER -