論文種別 原著(症例報告除く)
言語種別 英語
査読の有無 査読あり
表題 Immortalized Canine Dystrophic Myoblast Cell Lines for Development of Peptide-Conjugated Splice-Switching Oligonucleotides.
掲載誌名 正式名:Nucleic acid therapeutics
掲載区分国外
巻・号・頁 31(2),pp.172-181
著者・共著者 Yuichiro Tone,Kamel Mamchaoui,Maria K Tsoumpra,Yasumasa Hashimoto,Reiko Terada,Rika Maruyama,Michael J Gait,Andrey A Arzumanov,Graham McClorey,Michihiro Imamura,Shin'ichi Takeda,Toshifumi Yokota,Matthew J A Wood,Vincent Mouly,Yoshitsugu Aoki
発行年月 2021/02/09
概要 Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a severe muscle-wasting disease caused by frameshift or nonsense mutations in the DMD gene, resulting in the loss of dystrophin from muscle membranes. Exon skipping using splice-switching oligonucleotides (SSOs) restores the reading frame of DMD pre-mRNA by generating internally truncated but functional dystrophin protein. To potentiate effective tissue-specific targeting by functional SSOs, it is essential to perform accelerated and reliable in vitro screening-based assessment of novel oligonucleotides and drug delivery technologies, such as cell-penetrating peptides, before their in vivo pharmacokinetic and toxicity evaluation. We have established novel canine immortalized myoblast lines by transducing murine cyclin-dependent kinase-4 and human telomerase reverse transcriptase genes into myoblasts isolated from beagle-based wild-type or canine X-linked muscular dystrophy in Japan (CXMDJ) dogs. These myoblast lines exhibited improved myogenic differentiation and increased proliferation rates compared with passage-15 primary parental myoblasts, and their potential to differentiate into myotubes was maintained in later passages. Using these dystrophin-deficient immortalized myoblast lines, we demonstrate that a novel cell-penetrating peptide (Pip8b2)-conjugated SSO markedly improved multiexon skipping activity compared with the respective naked phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers. In vitro screening using immortalized canine cell lines will provide a basis for further pharmacological studies on drug delivery tools.
DOI 10.1089/nat.2020.0907
PMID 33567244