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Amelioration of muscle and nerve pathology of Lama2-related dystrophy by AAV9-laminin-αLN linker protein
Karen K. McKee, Peter D. Yurchenco
Karen K. McKee, Peter D. Yurchenco
Published May 31, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(13):e158397. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.158397.
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Research Article Muscle biology Neuroscience

Amelioration of muscle and nerve pathology of Lama2-related dystrophy by AAV9-laminin-αLN linker protein

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Abstract

LAMA2 deficiency, resulting from a defective or absent laminin α2 subunit, is a common cause of congenital muscular dystrophy. It is characterized by muscle weakness from myofiber degeneration and neuropathy from Schwann cell amyelination. Previously it was shown that transgenic muscle-specific expression of αLNNd, a laminin γ1–binding linker protein that enables polymerization in defective laminins, selectively ameliorates the muscle abnormality in mouse disease models. Here, adeno-associated virus was used to deliver linker mini-genes to dystrophic dy2J/dy2J mice for expression of αLNNd in muscle, or αLNNdΔG2′, a shortened linker, in muscle, nerve, and other tissues. Linker and laminin α2 levels were higher in αLNNdΔG2′-treated mice. Both αLNNd- and αLNNdΔG2′-treated mice exhibited increased forelimb grip strength. Further, αLNNdΔG2′-treated mice achieved hind limb and all-limb grip strength levels approaching those of WT mice as well as ablation of hind limb paresis and contractures. This was accompanied by restoration of sciatic nerve axonal envelopment and myelination. Improvement of muscle histology was evident in the muscle-specific αLNNd-expressing mice but more extensive in the αLNNdΔG2′-expressing mice. The results reveal that an αLN linker mini-gene, driven by a ubiquitous promoter, is superior to muscle-specific delivery because of its higher expression that extends to the peripheral nerve. These studies support a potentially novel approach of somatic gene therapy.

Authors

Karen K. McKee, Peter D. Yurchenco

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Figure 4

Sciatic nerve morphology.

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Sciatic nerve morphology.
(A) Representative methylene blue–stained semi...
(A) Representative methylene blue–stained semithin sections. Amyelination patches (examples indicated by arrows) are present in the sciatic nerves of dy2J/dy2J and AAV-SPc5-12-αLNNd–treated dy2J/dy2J mice, but not in WT (dy2J/+) or AAV-CBh-αLNNdΔG2′ (high and low dose) treated dy2J/dy2J mice. Bar = 100 μm. (B) Electron micrographs. Myelinated axons adjacent to normal-appearing Remak bundles (enveloped small-caliber axons) are present in the nerves of dy2J/+ and AAV-CBh-αLNNdΔG2′–treated dy2J/dy2J mice. Bar, 2 μm. (C) Higher magnification views of Remak bundles (bar, 200 nm) reveal that the axons of the dy2J/+ and AAV-CBh-αLNNdΔG2′–treated dy2J/dy2J Remak bundles each have an inner axonal membrane (skinny arrow) enveloped by a SC membrane (solid arrowhead). Remak bundles of dy2J/dy2J and AAV-SPc5-12-αLNNd–treated dy2J/dy2J contain a mixture of enveloped and naked axons. (D) SC BMs (empty arrowheads) are continuous in dy2J/+ and AAV-CBh-αLNNdΔG2′–treated dy2J/dy2J and discontinuous (asterisks) in untreated and AAV-SPc5-12-αLNNd–treated dy2J/dy2J nerve.

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