Potentially viable therapeutic approaches for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) are now within reach. Indeed, clinical trials are currently under way. Two crucial aspects still need to be addressed: maximizing therapeutic efficacy and identifying appropriate and sensible outcome measures. Nevertheless, the end point of these trials remains painful muscle biopsy to show and quantify protein restoration in treated boys. In this study we show that PMMA/N-isopropil-acrylamide+ (NIPAM) nanoparticles (ZM2) bind and convey antisense oligoribonucleotides (AONs) very efficiently. Systemic injection of the ZM2-AON complex restored dystrophin protein synthesis in both skeletal and cardiac muscles of mdx mice, allowing protein localization in up to 40% of muscle fibers. The mdx exon 23 skipping level was up to 20%, as measured by the RealTime assay, and dystrophin restoration was confirmed by both reverse transcription-PCR and western blotting. Furthermore, we verified that dystrophin restoration also occurs in the smooth muscle cells of the dorsal skin arrector pili, an easily accessible histological structure, in ZM2-AON-treated mdx mice, with respect to untreated animals. This finding reveals arrector pili smooth muscle to be an appealing biomarker candidate and a novel low-invasive treatment end point. Furthermore, this marker would also be suitable for subsequent monitoring of the therapeutic effects in DMD patients. In addition, we demonstrate herein the expression of other sarcolemma proteins such as alpha-, beta-, gamma- and delta-sarcoglycans in the human skin arrector pili smooth muscle, thereby showing the potential of this muscle as a biomarker for other muscular dystrophies currently or soon to be the object of clinical trials.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/gt.2009.145 | DOI Listing |
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry
November 2024
Department of Brain, Repair and Rehabilitation, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, London, UK
Background: Pure autonomic failure (PAF) presents with progressive autonomic failure without other neurological features. Atypical presentations may lead to diagnostic uncertainty. We studied whether cutaneous phosphorylated-alpha-synuclein (p-syn) could distinguish between PAF, multiple system atrophy (MSA) and non-synucleinopathy-related autonomic failure, and examined its relationship with quantitative markers of cardiovascular autonomic failure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosurg Case Lessons
September 2024
Departments of Neurological Surgery, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
Background: Leiomyosarcoma (LMS) is a rare neoplasm that arises from tissues of embryonic mesodermal origin. Primary tissues of origin can include smooth muscle cells of the abdominopelvic viscera, blood vessels, or arrector pili muscles. LMS is known to metastasize to the lungs, with few reported cases of spread to the central nervous system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistopathology
August 2024
Centre Léon Bérard, Cancer Research Center of Lyon, Equipe Labellisée Ligue contre le Cancer, Université de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Lyon, France.
Background And Aims: PKC-fused blue naevi are a recently described group of melanocytic tumours that have distinctive morphological features, including a pigmented epithelioid melanocytoma-like junctional component or a dermal biphasic architecture associating with naevocytoid nests surrounded by dendritic and spindled pigmented melanocytes (so-called 'combined common and blue naevus'). There have been reports of smooth muscle hyperplasia in a hamartoma-like pattern in cases of combined blue naevi without genetic exploration.
Materials And Methods: Herein, we describe 12 cases of protein kinase C (PKC)-fused blue tumours associated with a co-existing smooth muscle hyperplasia, identified from a total of 98 PKC-fused melanocytic tumours.
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