Grant Duration
09/24 – 12/25

Using purified dysferlin proteins and calibrated western blotting, this project’s goal was to ascertain the absolute amount of dysferlin in skeletal muscle from human and mouse using known amounts of appropriate pure dysferlin human or mouse proteins, respectively.  An additional goal was to provide information about the binding efficacy of the commonly used antibodies (Romeo and Hamlet) to ensure the correct antibody is used for further experiments.

The project used AAV dual vector technology to introduce dysferlin into mouse skeletal muscle and determine the amount of vector required, delivered by intramuscular or intravenous injection, to introduce physiologically relevant amounts of dysferlin by aiming to reach.  An apparent persistent problem with AAV delivery of dysferlin is resultant aberrant localization following reintroduction and the hope was to overcome this by using endogenous levels of dysferlin.  To test localization, we used immunohistochemistry to determine the localization of AAV introduced dysferlin using both cross-sectional and longitudinal samples.

The planned outcome of this work is providing an accurate measurement of the amount of dysferlin transfected in AAV-treated muscles advancing dysferlin research by understanding the minimum dosage of AAV required to transduce dysferlin expression to levels required to reduce symptoms and restore muscle function.