METHODS AND MEANS FOR EFFICIENT SKIPPING OF AT LEAST ONE OF THE FOLLOWING EXONS OF THE HUMAN DUCHENNE MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY GENE: 43, 46, 50-53

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20240360452
  • Publication Number
    20240360452
  • Date Filed
    July 12, 2024
    4 months ago
  • Date Published
    October 31, 2024
    22 days ago
Abstract
The invention relates to a method wherein a molecule is used for inducing and/or promoting skipping of at least one of exon 43, exon 46, or exons 50-53 of the DMD pre-mRNA in a patient, the method comprising providing the patient with the molecule. The invention also relates to the molecule as such.
Description
SEQUENCE LISTING

This application contains a Sequence Listing, which is being submitted herewith as an XML filed named “010507USCN5_SL.xml”, created on Jul. 12, 2024, size 680,971 bytes, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.


FIELD

The invention relates to the field of genetics, more specifically human genetics. The invention in particular relates to modulation of splicing of the human Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy pre-mRNA.


BACKGROUND

Myopathies are disorders that result in functional impairment of muscles. Muscular dystrophy (MD) refers to genetic diseases that are characterized by progressive weakness and degeneration of skeletal muscles. Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) are the most common childhood forms of muscular dystrophy. They are recessive disorders and because the gene responsible for DMD and BMD resides on the X-chromosome, mutations mainly affect males with an incidence of about 1 in 3500 boys.


DMD and BMD are caused by genetic defects in the DMD gene encoding dystrophin, a muscle protein that is required for interactions between the cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix to maintain muscle fiber stability during contraction. DMD is a severe, lethal neuromuscular disorder resulting in a dependency on wheelchair support before the age of 12 and DMD patients often die before the age of thirty due to respiratory- or heart failure. In contrast, BMD patients often remain ambulatory until later in life, and have near normal life expectancies. DMD mutations in the DMD gene are characterized by frame shifting insertions or deletions or nonsense point mutations, resulting in the absence of functional dystrophin. BMD mutations in general keep the reading frame intact, allowing synthesis of a partly functional dystrophin.


During the last decade, specific modification of splicing in order to restore the disrupted reading frame of the dystrophin transcript has emerged as a promising therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) (van Ommen, van Deutekom, Aartsma-Rus, Curr Opin Mol Ther. 2008; 10(2):140-9, Yokota, Duddy, Partidge, Acta Myol. 2007; 26(3):179-84, van Deutekom et al., N Engl J Med. 2007; 357(26):2677-86).


Using antisense oligonucleotides (AONs) interfering with splicing signals the skipping of specific exons can be induced in the DMD pre-mRNA, thus restoring the open reading frame and converting the severe DMD into a milder BMD phenotype (van Deutekom et al. Hum Mol Genet. 2001; 10: 1547-54; Aartsma-Rus et al., Hum Mol Genet 2003; 12(8):907-14.). In vivo proof-of-concept was first obtained in the mdx mouse model, which is dystrophin-deficient due to a nonsense mutation in exon 23. Intramuscular and intravenous injections of AONs targeting the mutated exon 23 restored dystrophin expression for at least three months (Lu et al. Nat Med. 2003; 8: 1009-14; Lu et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci US A. 2005; 102(1):198-203). This was accompanied by restoration of dystrophin-associated proteins at the fiber membrane as well as functional improvement of the treated muscle. In vivo skipping of human exons has also been achieved in the hDMD mouse model, which contains a complete copy of the human DMD gene integrated in chromosome 5 of the mouse (Bremmer-Bout et al. Molecular Therapy. 2004; 10: 232-40; 't Hoen et al. J Biol Chem. 2008; 283: 5899-907).


Recently, a first-in-man study was successfully completed where an AON inducing the skipping of exon 51 was injected into a small area of the tibialis anterior muscle of four DMD patients. Novel dystrophin expression was observed in the majority of muscle fibers in all four patients treated, and the AON was safe and well tolerated (van Deutekom et al. N Engl J Med. 2007; 357: 2677-86).





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1. In human control myotubes, a series of AONs (PS237, PS238, and PS240; SEQ ID NO 65, 66, 16 respectively) targeting exon 43 was tested at 500 nM. PS237 (SEQ ID NO 65) reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 43 skipping. (M: DNA size marker; NT: non-treated cells)



FIG. 2. In myotubes from a DMD patient with an exon 45 deletion, a series of AONs (PS177, PS179, PS181, and PS182; SEQ ID NO 91, 70, 110, and 117 respectively) targeting exon 46 was tested at two different concentrations (50 and 150 nM). PS182 (SEQ ID NO 117) reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 46 skipping. (M: DNA size marker)



FIG. 3. In human control myotubes, a series of AONs (PS245, PS246, PS247, and PS248; SEQ ID NO 167, 165, 166, and 127 respectively) targeting exon 50 was tested at 500 nM. PS248 (SEQ ID NO 127) reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 50 skipping. (M: DNA size marker; NT: non-treated cells).



FIG. 4. In human control myotubes, two novel AONs (PS232 and PS236; SEQ ID NO 246 and 299 respectively) targeting exon 52 were tested at two different concentrations (200 and 500 nM) and directly compared to a previously described AON (52-1). PS236 (SEQ ID NO 299) reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 52 skipping. (M: DNA size marker; NT: non-treated cells).





DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Method

In a first aspect, the present invention provides a method for inducing, and/or promoting skipping of at least one of exons 43, 46, 50-53 of the DMD pre-mRNA in a patient, preferably in an isolated cell of a patient, the method comprising providing said cell and/or said patient with a molecule that binds to a continuous stretch of at least 8 nucleotides within said exon. It is to be understood that said method encompasses an in vitro, in vivo or ex vivo method.


Accordingly, a method is provided for inducing and/or promoting skipping of at least one of exons 43, 46, 50-53 of DMD pre-mRNA in a patient, preferably in an isolated cell of said patient, the method comprising providing said cell and/or said patient with a molecule that binds to a continuous stretch of at least 8 nucleotides within said exon.


As defined herein a DMD pre-mRNA preferably means the pre-mRNA of a DMD gene of a DMD or BMD patient.


A patient is preferably intended to mean a patient having DMD or BMD as later defined herein or a patient susceptible to develop DMD or BMD due to his or her genetic background. In the case of a DMD patient, an oligonucleotide used will preferably correct one mutation as present in the DMD gene of said patient and therefore will preferably create a DMD protein that will look like a BMD protein: said protein will preferably be a functional dystrophin as later defined herein. In the case of a BMD patient, an oligonucleotide as used will preferably correct one mutation as present in the BMD gene of said patient and therefore will preferably create a dystrophin which will be more functional than the dystrophin which was originally present in said BMD patient.


Exon skipping refers to the induction in a cell of a mature mRNA that does not contain a particular exon that is normally present therein. Exon skipping is performed by providing a cell expressing the pre-mRNA of said mRNA with a molecule capable of interfering with essential sequences such as for example the splice donor of splice acceptor sequence that required for splicing of said exon, or a molecule that is capable of interfering with an exon inclusion signal that is required for recognition of a stretch of nucleotides as an exon to be included in the mRNA. The term pre-mRNA refers to a non-processed or partly processed precursor mRNA that is synthesized from a DNA template in the cell nucleus by transcription.


Within the context of the invention, inducing and/or promoting skipping of an exon as indicated herein means that at least 1%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90% or more of the DMD mRNA in one or more (muscle) cells of a treated patient will not contain said exon. This is preferably assessed by PCR as described in the examples.


Preferably, a method of the invention by inducing and/or promoting skipping of at least one of the following exons 43, 46, 50-53 of the DMD pre-mRNA in one or more (muscle) cells of a patient, provides said patient with a functional dystrophin protein and/or decreases the production of an aberrant dystrophin protein in said patient and/or increases the production of a functional dystrophin is said patient.


Providing a patient with a functional dystrophin protein and/or decreasing the production of an aberrant dystrophin protein in said patient is typically applied in a DMD patient. Increasing the production of a functional dystrophin is typically applied in a BMD patient.


Therefore, a preferred method is a method, wherein a patient or one or more cells of said patient is provided with a functional dystrophin protein and/or wherein the production of an aberrant dystrophin protein in said patient is decreased and/or wherein the production of a functional dystrophin is increased in said patient, wherein the level of said aberrant or functional dystrophin is assessed by comparison to the level of said dystrophin in said patient at the onset of the method.


Decreasing the production of an aberrant dystrophin may be assessed at the mRNA level and preferably means that 99%, 90%, 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, 40%, 30%, 20%, 10%, 5% or less of the initial amount of aberrant dystrophin mRNA, is still detectable by RT PCR. An aberrant dystrophin mRNA or protein is also referred to herein as a non-functional dystrophin mRNA or protein. A non-functional dystrophin protein is preferably a dystrophin protein which is not able to bind actin and/or members of the DGC protein complex. A non-functional dystrophin protein or dystrophin mRNA does typically not have, or does not encode, a dystrophin protein with an intact C-terminus of the protein.


Increasing the production of a functional dystrophin in said patient or in a cell of said patient may be assessed at the mRNA level (by RT-PCR analysis) and preferably means that a detectable amount of a functional dystrophin mRNA is detectable by RT PCR. In another embodiment, 1%, 5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90% or more of the detectable dystrophin mRNA is a functional dystrophin mRNA. Increasing the production of a functional dystrophin in said patient or in a cell of said patient may be assessed at the protein level (by immunofluorescence and western blot analyses) and preferably means that a detectable amount of a functional dystrophin protein is detectable by immunofluorescence or western blot analysis. In another embodiment, 1%, 5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90% or more of the detectable dystrophin protein is a functional dystrophin protein.


As defined herein, a functional dystrophin is preferably a wild type dystrophin corresponding to a protein having the amino acid sequence as identified in SEQ ID NO: 1. A functional dystrophin is preferably a dystrophin, which has an actin binding domain in its N terminal part (first 240 amino acids at the N terminus), a cysteine-rich domain (amino acid 3361 till 3685) and a C terminal domain (last 325 amino acids at the C terminus) each of these domains being present in a wild type dystrophin as known to the skilled person. The amino acids indicated herein correspond to amino acids of the wild type dystrophin being represented by SEQ ID NO:1. In other words, a functional dystrophin is a dystrophin which exhibits at least to some extent an activity of a wild type dystrophin. “At least to some extent” preferably means at least 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95% or 100% of a corresponding activity of a wild type functional dystrophin. In this context, an activity of a functional dystrophin is preferably binding to actin and to the dystrophin-associated glycoprotein complex (DGC) (Aartsma-Rus A et al, (2006), Entries in the leiden Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy mutation database: an overview of mutation types and paradoxical cases that confirm the reading-frame rule, Muscle Nerve, 34: 135-144). Binding of dystrophin to actin and to the DGC complex may be visualized by either co-immunoprecipitation using total protein extracts or immunofluorescence analysis of cross-sections, from a muscle biopsy, as known to the skilled person.


Individuals or patients suffering from Duchenne muscular dystrophy typically have a mutation in the gene encoding dystrophin that prevent synthesis of the complete protein, i.e of a premature stop prevents the synthesis of the C-terminus. In Becker muscular dystrophy the DMD gene also comprises a mutation compared to the wild type gene, but the mutation does typically not induce a premature stop and the C-terminus is typically synthesized. As a result, a functional dystrophin protein is synthesized that has at least the same activity in kind as the wild type protein, not although not necessarily the same amount of activity. The genome of a BMD individual typically encodes a dystrophin protein comprising the N terminal part (first 240 amino acids at the N terminus), a cysteine-rich domain (amino acid 3361 till 3685) and a C terminal domain (last 325 amino acids at the C terminus) but its central rod shaped domain may be shorter than the one of a wild type dystrophin (Aartsma-Rus A et al, (2006), Entries in the leiden Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy mutation database: an overview of mutation types and paradoxical cases that confirm the reading-frame rule, Muscle Nerve, 34: 135-144). Exon skipping for the treatment of DMD is typically directed to overcome a premature stop in the pre-mRNA by skipping an exon in the rod-shaped domain to correct the reading frame and allow synthesis of remainder of the dystrophin protein including the C-terminus, albeit that the protein is somewhat smaller as a result of a smaller rod domain. In a preferred embodiment, an individual having DMD and being treated by a method as defined herein will be provided a dystrophin which exhibits at least to some extent an activity of a wild type dystrophin. More preferably, if said individual is a Duchenne patient or is suspected to be a Duchenne patient, a functional dystrophin is a dystrophin of an individual having BMD: typically said dystrophin is able to interact with both actin and the DGC, but its central rod shaped domain may be shorter than the one of a wild type dystrophin (Aartsma-Rus A et al, (2006), Entries in the leiden Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy mutation database: an overview of mutation types and paradoxical cases that confirm the reading-frame rule, Muscle Nerve, 34: 135-144). The central rod-shaped domain of wild type dystrophin comprises 24 spectrin-like repeats (Aartsma-Rus A et al, (2006), Entries in the leiden Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy mutation database: an overview of mutation types and paradoxical cases that confirm the reading-frame rule, Muscle Nerve, 34: 135-144). For example, a central rod-shaped domain of a dystrophin as provided herein may comprise 5 to 23, 10 to 22 or 12 to 18 spectrin-like repeats as long as it can bind to actin and to DGC.


A method of the invention may alleviate one or more characteristics of a myogenic or muscle cell of a patient or alleviate one or more symptoms of a DMD patient having a deletion including but not limited to exons 44, 44-46, 44-47, 44-48, 44-49, 44-51, 44-53 (correctable by exon 43 skipping), 19-45, 21-45, 43-45, 45, 47-54, 47-56 (correctable by exon 46 skipping), 51, 51-53, 51-55, 51-57 (correctable by exon 50 skipping), 13-50, 19-50, 29-50, 43-50, 45-50, 47-50, 48-50, 49-50, 50, 52 (correctable by exon 51 skipping), exons 8-51, 51, 53, 53-55, 53-57, 53-59, 53-60, (correctable by exon 52 skipping) and exons 10-52, 42-52, 43-52, 45-52, 47-52, 48-52, 49-52, 50-52, 52 (correctable by exon 53 skipping) in the DMD gene, occurring in a total of 68% of all DMD patients with a deletion (Aartsma-Rus et al., Hum. Mut. 2009).


Alternatively, a method of the invention may improve one or more characteristics of a muscle cell of a patient or alleviate one or more symptoms of a DMD patient having small mutations in, or single exon duplications of exon 43, 46, 50-53 in the DMD gene, occurring in a total of 36% of all DMD patients with a deletion (Aartsma-Rus et al, Hum. Mut. 2009)


Furthermore, for some patients the simultaneous skipping of one of more exons in addition to exon 43, exon 46 and/or exon 50-53 is required to restore the open reading frame, including patients with specific deletions, small (point) mutations, or double or multiple exon duplications, such as (but not limited to) a deletion of exons 44-50 requiring the co-skipping of exons 43 and 51, with a deletion of exons 46-50 requiring the co-skipping of exons 45 and 51, with a deletion of exons 44-52 requiring the co-skipping of exons 43 and 53, with a deletion of exons 46-52 requiring the co-skipping of exons 45 and 53, with a deletion of exons 51-54 requiring the co-skipping of exons 50 and 55, with a deletion of exons 53-54 requiring the co-skipping of exons 52 and 55, with a deletion of exons 53-56 requiring the co-skipping of exons 52 and 57, with a nonsense mutation in exon 43 or exon 44 requiring the co-skipping of exon 43 and 44, with a nonsense mutation in exon 45 or exon 46 requiring the co-skipping of exon 45 and 46, with a nonsense mutation in exon 50 or exon 51 requiring the co-skipping of exon 50 and 51, with a nonsense mutation in exon 51 or exon 52 requiring the co-skipping of exon 51 and 52, with a nonsense mutation in exon 52 or exon 53 requiring the co-skipping of exon 52 and 53, or with a double or multiple exon duplication involving exons 43, 46, 50, 51, 52, and/or 53.


In a preferred method, the skipping of exon 43 is induced, or the skipping of exon 46 is induced, or the skipping of exon 50 is induced or the skipping of exon 51 is induced or the skipping of exon 52 is induced or the skipping of exon 53 is induced. An induction of the skipping of two of these exons is also encompassed by a method of the invention. For example, preferably skipping of exons 50 and 51, or 52 and 53, or 30 43 and 51, or 43 and 53, or 51 and 52. Depending on the type and the identity (the specific exons involved) of mutation identified in a patient, the skilled person will know which combination of exons needs to be skipped in said patient.


In a preferred method, one or more symptom(s) of a DMD or a BMD patient is/are alleviated and/or one or more characteristic(s) of one or more muscle cells from a DMD or a BMD patient is/are improved. Such symptoms or characteristics may be assessed at the cellular, tissue level or on the patient self.


An alleviation of one or more characteristics may be assessed by any of the following assays on a myogenic cell or muscle cell from a patient: reduced calcium uptake by muscle cells, decreased collagen synthesis, altered morphology, altered lipid biosynthesis, decreased oxidative stress, and/or improved muscle fiber function, integrity, and/or survival. These parameters are usually assessed using immunofluorescence and/or histochemical analyses of cross sections of muscle biopsies.


The improvement of muscle fiber function, integrity and/or survival may be assessed using at least one of the following assays: a detectable decrease of creatine kinase in blood, a detectable decrease of necrosis of muscle fibers in a biopsy cross-section of a muscle suspected to be dystrophic, and/or a detectable increase of the homogeneity of the diameter of muscle fibers in a biopsy cross-section of a muscle suspected to be dystrophic. Each of these assays is known to the skilled person.


Creatine kinase may be detected in blood as described in Hodgetts et al (Hodgetts S., et al, (2006), Neuromuscular Disorders, 16: 591-602.2006). A detectable decrease in creatine kinase may mean a decrease of 5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90% or more compared to the concentration of creatine kinase in a same DMD or BMD patient before treatment.


A detectable decrease of necrosis of muscle fibers is preferably assessed in a muscle biopsy, more preferably as described in Hodgetts et al (Hodgetts S., et al (2006), Neuromuscular Disorders, 16: 591-602.2006) using biopsy cross-sections. A detectable decrease of necrosis may be a decrease of 5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90% or more of the area wherein necrosis has been identified using biopsy cross-sections. The decrease is measured by comparison to the necrosis as assessed in a same DMD or BMD patient before treatment.


A detectable increase of the homogeneity of the diameter of a muscle fiber is preferably assessed in a muscle biopsy cross-section, more preferably as described in Hodgetts et al (Hodgetts S., et al, (2006), Neuromuscular Disorders, 16: 591-602.2006). The increase is measured by comparison to the homogeneity of the diameter of a muscle fiber in a same DMD or BMD patient before treatment. An alleviation of one or more symptoms may be assessed by any of the following assays on the patient self: prolongation of time to loss of walking, improvement of muscle strength, improvement of the ability to lift weight, improvement of the time taken to rise from the floor, improvement in the nine-meter walking time, improvement in the time taken for four-stairs climbing, improvement of the leg function grade, improvement of the pulmonary function, improvement of cardiac function, improvement of the quality of life. Each of these assays is known to the skilled person. As an example, the publication of Manzur et al. (Manzur A Y et al, (2008), Glucocorticoid corticosteroids for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (review), Wiley publishers, The Cochrane collaboration.) gives an extensive explanation of each of these assays. For each of these assays, as soon as a detectable improvement or prolongation of a parameter measured in an assay has been found, it will preferably mean that one or more symptoms of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy or Becker Muscular Dystrophy has been alleviated in an individual using a method of the invention. Detectable improvement or prolongation is preferably a statistically significant improvement or prolongation as described in Hodgetts et al (Hodgetts S., et al, (2006), Neuromuscular Disorders, 16: 591-602.2006). Alternatively, the alleviation of one or more symptom(s) of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy or Becker Muscular Dystrophy may be assessed by measuring an improvement of a muscle fiber function, integrity and/or survival as later defined herein.


A treatment in a method according to the invention may have a duration of at least one week, at least one month, at least several months, at least one year, at least 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 years or more.


Each molecule or oligonucleotide or equivalent thereof as defined herein for use according to the invention may be suitable for direct administration to a cell, tissue and/or an organ in vivo of individuals affected by or at risk of developing DMD or BMD, and may be administered directly in vivo, ex vivo or in vitro. The frequency of administration of a molecule or an oligonucleotide or a composition of the invention may depend on several parameters such as the age of the patient, the mutation of the patient, the number of molecules (dose), the formulation of said molecule. The frequency may be ranged between at least once in a two weeks, or three weeks or four weeks or five weeks or a longer time period.


A molecule or oligonucleotide or equivalent thereof can be delivered as is to a cell. When administering said molecule, oligonucleotide or equivalent thereof to an individual, it is preferred that it is dissolved in a solution that is compatible with the delivery method. For intravenous, subcutaneous, intramuscular, intrathecal and/or intraventricular administration it is preferred that the solution is a physiological salt solution. Particularly preferred for a method of the invention is the use of an excipient that will further enhance delivery of said molecule, oligonucleotide or functional equivalent thereof as defined herein, to a cell and into a cell, preferably a muscle cell. Preferred excipients are defined in the section entitled “pharmaceutical composition”.


In a preferred method of the invention, an additional molecule is used which is able to induce and/or promote skipping of another exon of the DMD pre-mRNA of a patient. Preferably, the second exon is selected from: exon 6, 7, 11, 17, 19, 21, 43, 44, 45, 50, 51, 52, 53, 55, 57, 59, 62, 63, 65, 66, 69, or 75 of the DMD pre-mRNA of a patient. Molecules which can be used are depicted in any one of Table 1 to 7. This way, inclusion of two or more exons of a DMD pre-mRNA in mRNA produced from this pre-mRNA is prevented. This embodiment is further referred to as double- or multi-exon skipping (Aartsma-Rus A, Janson A A, Kaman W E, et al. Antisense-induced multiexon skipping for Duchenne muscular dystrophy makes more sense. Am J Hum Genet 2004; 74(1):83-92, Aartsma-Rus A, Kaman W E, Weij R, den Dunnen J T, van Ommen G J, van Deutekom J C. Exploring the frontiers of therapeutic exon skipping for Duchenne muscular dystrophy by double targeting within one or multiple exons. Mol Ther 2006; 14(3):401-7). In most cases double-exon skipping results in the exclusion of only the two targeted exons from the DMD pre-mRNA. However, in other cases it was found that the targeted exons and the entire region in between said exons in said pre-mRNA were not present in the produced mRNA even when other exons (intervening exons) were present in such region. This multi-skipping was notably so for the combination of oligonucleotides derived from the DMD gene, wherein one oligonucleotide for exon 45 and one oligonucleotide for exon 51 was added to a cell transcribing the DMD gene. Such a set-up resulted in mRNA being produced that did not contain exons 45 to 51. Apparently, the structure of the pre-mRNA in the presence of the mentioned oligonucleotides was such that the splicing machinery was stimulated to connect exons 44 and 52 to each other.


It is possible to specifically promote the skipping of also the intervening exons by providing a linkage between the two complementary oligonucleotides. Hence, in one embodiment stretches of nucleotides complementary to at least two dystrophin exons are separated by a linking moiety. The at least two stretches of nucleotides are thus linked in this embodiment so as to form a single molecule.


In case, more than one compounds or molecules are used in a method of the invention, said compounds can be administered to an individual in any order. In one embodiment, said compounds are administered simultaneously (meaning that said compounds are administered within 10 hours, preferably within one hour). This is however not necessary. In another embodiment, said compounds are administered sequentially.


Molecule

In a second aspect, there is provided a molecule for use in a method as described in the previous section entitled “Method”. A molecule as defined herein is preferably an oligonucleotide or antisense oligonucleotide (AON).


It was found by the present investigators that any of exon 43, 46, 50-53 is specifically skipped at a high frequency using a molecule that preferably binds to a continuous stretch of at least 8 nucleotides within said exon. Although this effect can be associated with a higher binding affinity of said molecule, compared to a molecule that binds to a continuous stretch of less than 8 nucleotides, there could be other intracellular parameters involved that favor thermodynamic, kinetic, or structural characteristics of the hybrid duplex. In a preferred embodiment, a molecule that binds to a continuous stretch of at least 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50 nucleotides within said exon is used.


In a preferred embodiment, a molecule or an oligonucleotide of the invention which comprises a sequence that is complementary to a part of any of exon 43, 46, 50-53 of DMD pre-mRNA is such that the complementary part is at least 50% of the length of the oligonucleotide of the invention, more preferably at least 60%, even more preferably at least 70%, even more preferably at least 80%, even more preferably at least 90% or even more preferably at least 95%, or even more preferably 98% and most preferably up to 100%. “A part of said exon” preferably means a stretch of at least 8 nucleotides. In a most preferred embodiment, an oligonucleotide of the invention consists of a sequence that is complementary to part of said exon DMD pre-mRNA as defined herein. For example, an oligonucleotide may comprise a sequence that is complementary to part of said exon DMD pre-mRNA as defined herein and additional flanking sequences. In a more preferred embodiment, the length of said complementary part of said oligonucleotide is of at least 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50 nucleotides. Preferably, additional flanking sequences are used to modify the binding of a protein to said molecule or oligonucleotide, or to modify a thermodynamic property of the oligonucleotide, more preferably to modify target RNA binding affinity.


A preferred molecule to be used in a method of the invention binds or is complementary to a continuous stretch of at least 8 nucleotides within one of the following nucleotide sequences selected from:










(SEQ ID NO: 2) 



5′-AGAUAGUCUACAACAAAGCUCAGGUCGGAUUGACAUUAUUCAUAGCAAGAAG



ACAGCAGCAUUGCAAAGUGCAACGCCUGUGG-3′ for skipping of exon 43;





(SEQ ID NO: 3)



5′-UUAUGGUUGGAGGAAGCAGAUAACAUUGCUAGUAUCCCACUUGAACCUGGAA



AAGAGCAGCAACUAAAAGAAAAGC-3′ for skipping of exon 46;





(SEQ ID NO: 4)



5′-GGCGGUAAACCGUUUACUUCAAGAGCUGAGGGCAAAGCAGCCUGACCUAGCUC



CUGGACUGACCACUAUUGG-3′ for skipping of exon 50;





(SEQ ID NO: 5)



5′-CUCCUACUCAGACUGUUACUCUGGUGACACAACCUGUGGUUACUAAGGAAA



CUGCCAUCUCCAAACUAGAAAUGCCAUCUUCCUUGAUGUUGGAGGUAC-3′


for skipping of exon 51;





(SEQ ID NO: 6)



5′-AUGCAGGAUUUGGAACAGAGGCGUCCCCAGUUGGAAGAACUCAU



UACCGCUGCCCAAAAUUUGAAAAACAAGACCAGCAAUCAAGAGGCU-3′


for skipping of exon 52;


and





(SEQ ID NO: 7)



5′-AAAUGUUAAAGGAUUCAACACAAUGGCUGGAAGCUAAGGAAGAA



GCUGAGCAGGUCUUAGGACAGGCCAGAG-3′ for skipping of exon 53.






Of the numerous molecules that theoretically can be prepared to bind to the continuous nucleotide stretches as defined by SEQ ID NO 2-7 within one of said exons, the invention provides distinct molecules that can be used in a method for efficiently skipping of at least one of exon 43, exon 46 and/or exon 50-53. Although the skipping effect can be addressed to the relatively high density of putative SR protein binding sites within said stretches, there could be other parameters involved that favor uptake of the molecule or other, intracellular parameters such as thermodynamic, kinetic, or structural characteristics of the hybrid duplex.


It was found that a molecule that binds to a continuous stretch comprised within or consisting of any of SEQ ID NO 2-7 results in highly efficient skipping of exon 43, exon 46 and/or exon 50-53 respectively in a cell and/or in a patient provided with this molecule.


Therefore, in a preferred embodiment, a method is provided wherein a molecule binds to a continuous stretch of at least 8, 10, 12, 15, 18, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50 nucleotides within SEQ ID NO 2-7.


In a preferred embodiment for inducing and/or promoting the skipping of any of exon 43, exon 46 and/or exon 50-53, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of an antisense nucleotide sequence selected from the antisense nucleotide sequences depicted in any of Tables 1 to 6. A molecule of the invention preferably comprises or consist of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 16, SEQ ID NO 65, SEQ ID NO 70, SEQ ID NO 91, SEQ ID NO 110, SEQ ID NO 117, SEQ ID NO 127, SEQ ID NO 165, SEQ ID NO 166, SEQ ID NO 167, SEQ ID NO 246, SEQ ID NO 299, SEQ ID NO:357.


A preferred molecule of the invention comprises a nucleotide-based or nucleotide or an antisense oligonucleotide sequence of between 8 and 50 nucleotides or bases, more preferred between 10 and 50 nucleotides, more preferred between 20 and 40 nucleotides, more preferred between 20 and 30 nucleotides, such as 20 nucleotides, 21 nucleotides, 22 nucleotides, 23 nucleotides, 24 nucleotides, 25 nucleotides, 26 nucleotides, 27 nucleotides, 28 nucleotides, 29 nucleotides, 30 nucleotides, 31 nucleotides, 32 nucleotides, 33 nucleotides, 34 nucleotides, 35 nucleotides, 36 nucleotides, 37 nucleotides, 38 nucleotides, 39 nucleotides, 40 nucleotides, 41 nucleotides, 42 nucleotides, 43 nucleotides, 44 nucleotides, 45 nucleotides, 46 nucleotides, 47 nucleotides, 48 nucleotides, 49 nucleotides or 50 nucleotides. A most preferred molecule of the invention comprises a nucleotide-based sequence of 25 nucleotides.


Furthermore, none of the indicated sequences is derived from conserved parts of splice-junction sites. Therefore, said molecule is not likely to mediate differential splicing of other exons from the DMD pre-mRNA or exons from other genes.


In one embodiment, a molecule of the invention is a compound molecule that binds to the specified sequence, or a protein such as an RNA-binding protein or a non-natural zinc-finger protein that has been modified to be able to bind to the corresponding nucleotide sequence on a DMD pre-RNA molecule. Methods for screening compound molecules that bind specific nucleotide sequences are, for example, disclosed in PCT/NL01/00697 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,875,736, which are herein incorporated by reference. Methods for designing RNA-binding Zinc-finger proteins that bind specific nucleotide sequences are disclosed by Friesen and Darby, Nature Structural Biology 5: 543-546 (1998) which is herein incorporated by reference.


A preferred molecule of the invention binds to at least part of the sequence of SEQ ID NO 2:5′-AGAUAGUCUACAACAAAGCUCAGGUCGGAUUGACAUUAUUCAU AGCAAGAAGACAGCAGCAUUGCAAAGUGCAACGCCUGUGG-3′ which is present in exon 43 of the DMD gene. More preferably, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 8 to SEQ ID NO 69.


In an even more preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO:16 and/or SEQ ID NO:65. In a most preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 65. It was found that this molecule is very efficient in modulating splicing of exon 43 of the DMD pre-mRNA in a muscle cell and/or in a patient.


Another preferred molecule of the invention binds to at least part of the sequence of SEQ ID NO 3: 5′-UUAUGGUUGGAGGAAGCAGAUAACAUUGCUAGUAUCCCACUUG AACCUGGAAAAGAGCAGCAACUAAAAGAAAAGC-3′ which is present in exon 46 of the DMD gene. More preferably, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 70 to SEQ ID NO 122.


In an even more preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 70, SEQ ID NO 91, SEQ ID NO 110, and/or SEQ ID NO117.


In a most preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 117. It was found that this molecule is very efficient in modulating splicing of exon 46 of the DMD pre-mRNA in a muscle cell or in a patient.


Another preferred molecule of the invention binds to at least part of the sequence of SEQ ID NO 4: 5′-GGCGGUAAACCGUUUACUUCAAGAGCU GAGGGCAAAGCAGCCUG ACCUAGCUCCUGGACUGACCACUAUUGG-3′ which is present in exon 50 of the DMD gene. More preferably, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 123 to SEQ ID NO 167 and/or SEQ ID NO 529 to SEQ ID NO 535.


In an even more preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 127, or SEQ ID NO 165, or SEQ ID NO 166 and/or SEQ ID NO 167.


In a most preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 127. It was found that this molecule is very efficient in modulating splicing of exon 50 of the DMD pre-mRNA in a muscle cell and/or in a patient.


Another preferred molecule of the invention binds to at least part of the sequence of SEQ ID NO 5: 5′-CUCCUACUCAGACUGUUACUCUGGUGACACAACCUGUGGUUACU AAGGAAACUGCCAUCUCCAAACUAGAAAUGCCAUCUUCCUUGAUG UUGGAGGUAC-3′ which is present in exon 51 of the DMD gene. More preferably, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 168 to SEQ ID NO 241.


Another preferred molecule of the invention binds to at least part of the sequence of SEQ IDNO 6: 5′-AUGCAGGAUUUGGAACAGAGGCGUCCCCAGUUGGAAGAACUCAU UACCGCUGCCCAAAAUUUGAAAAACAAGACCAGCAAUCAAGAGGCU-3′ which is present in exon 52 of the DMD gene. More preferably, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 242 to SEQ ID NO 310. In an even more preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 246 and/or SEQ ID NO 299. In a most preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 299. It was found that this molecule is very efficient in modulating splicing of exon 52 of the DMD pre-mRNA in a muscle cell and/or in a patient.


Another preferred molecule of the invention binds to at least part of the sequence of SEQ ID NO 7: 5′-AAAUGUUAAAGGAUUCAACACAAUGGCUGGAAGCUAAGGAAGAA GCUGAGCAGGUCUUAGGACAGGCCAGAG-3′ which is present in exon 53 of the DMD gene. More preferably, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 311 to SEQ ID NO 358.


In a most preferred embodiment, the invention provides a molecule comprising or consisting of the antisense nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO 357. It was found that this molecule is very efficient in modulating splicing of exon 53 of the DMD pre-mRNA in a muscle cell and/or in a patient.


A nucleotide sequence of a molecule of the invention may contain RNA residues, or one or more DNA residues, and/or one or more nucleotide analogues or equivalents, as will be further detailed herein below.


It is preferred that a molecule of the invention comprises one or more residues that are modified to increase nuclease resistance, and/or to increase the affinity of the antisense nucleotide for the target sequence. Therefore, in a preferred embodiment, the antisense nucleotide sequence comprises at least one nucleotide analogue or equivalent, wherein a nucleotide analogue or equivalent is defined as a residue having a modified base, and/or a modified backbone, and/or a non-natural internucleoside linkage, or a combination of these modifications.


In a preferred embodiment, the nucleotide analogue or equivalent comprises a modified backbone. Examples of such backbones are provided by morpholino backbones, carbamate backbones, siloxane backbones, sulfide, sulfoxide and sulfone backbones, formacetyl and thioformacetyl backbones, methyleneformacetyl backbones, riboacetyl backbones, alkene containing backbones, sulfamate, sulfonate and sulfonamide backbones, methyleneimino and methylenehydrazino backbones, and amide backbones. Phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers are modified backbone oligonucleotides that have previously been investigated as antisense agents. Morpholino oligonucleotides have an uncharged backbone in which the deoxyribose sugar of DNA is replaced by a six membered ring and the phosphodiester linkage is replaced by a phosphorodiamidate linkage. Morpholino oligonucleotides are resistant to enzymatic degradation and appear to function as antisense agents by arresting translation or interfering with pre-mRNA splicing rather than by activating RNase H. Morpholino oligonucleotides have been successfully delivered to tissue culture cells by methods that physically disrupt the cell membrane, and one study comparing several of these methods found that scrape loading was the most efficient method of delivery; however, because the morpholino backbone is uncharged, cationic lipids are not effective mediators of morpholino oligonucleotide uptake in cells. A recent report demonstrated triplex formation by a morpholino oligonucleotide and, because of the non-ionic backbone, these studies showed that the morpholino oligonucleotide was capable of triplex formation in the absence of magnesium.


It is further preferred that that the linkage between the residues in a backbone do not include a phosphorus atom, such as a linkage that is formed by short chain alkyl or cycloalkyl internucleoside linkages, mixed heteroatom and alkyl or cycloalkyl internucleoside linkages, or one or more short chain heteroatomic or heterocyclic internucleoside linkages.


A preferred nucleotide analogue or equivalent comprises a Peptide Nucleic Acid (PNA), having a modified polyamide backbone (Nielsen, et al. (1991) Science 254, 1497-1500). PNA-based molecules are true mimics of DNA molecules in terms of base-pair recognition. The backbone of the PNA is composed of N-(2-aminoethyl)-glycine units linked by peptide bonds, wherein the nucleobases are linked to the backbone by methylene carbonyl bonds. An alternative backbone comprises a one-carbon extended pyrrolidine PNA monomer (Govindaraju and Kumar (2005) Chem. Commun, 495-497). Since the backbone of a PNA molecule contains no charged phosphate groups, PNA-RNA hybrids are usually more stable than RNA-RNA or RNA-DNA hybrids, respectively (Egholm et al (1993) Nature 365, 566-568).


A further preferred backbone comprises a morpholino nucleotide analog or equivalent, in which the ribose or deoxyribose sugar is replaced by a 6-membered morpholino ring. A most preferred nucleotide analog or equivalent comprises a phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomer (PMO), in which the ribose or deoxyribose sugar is replaced by a 6-membered morpholino ring, and the anionic phosphodiester linkage between adjacent morpholino rings is replaced by a non-ionic phosphorodiamidate linkage.


In yet a further embodiment, a nucleotide analogue or equivalent of the invention comprises a substitution of one of the non-bridging oxygens in the phosphodiester linkage. This modification slightly destabilizes base-pairing but adds significant resistance to nuclease degradation. A preferred nucleotide analogue or equivalent comprises phosphorothioate, chiral phosphorothioate, phosphorodithioate, phosphotriester, aminoalkylphosphotriester, H-phosphonate, methyl and other alkylphosphonate including 3′-alkylene phosphonate, 5′-alkylene phosphonate and chiral phosphonate, phosphinate, phosphoramidate including 3′-amino phosphoramidate and aminoalkylphosphoramidate, thionophosphoramidate, thionoalkylphosphonate, thionoalkylphosphotriester, selenophosphate or boranophosphate.


A further preferred nucleotide analogue or equivalent of the invention comprises one or more sugar moieties that are mono- or disubstituted at the 2′, 3′ and/or 5′ position such as a —OH; —F; substituted or unsubstituted, linear or branched lower (C1-C10) alkyl, alkenyl, alkynyl, alkaryl, allyl, aryl, or aralkyl, that may be interrupted by one or more heteroatoms; O—, S—, or N-alkyl; O—, S—, or N-alkenyl; O—, S— or N-alkynyl; O—, S—, or N-allyl; O-alkyl-O-alkyl, -methoxy, -aminopropoxy; -aminoxy; methoxyethoxy; -dimethylaminooxyethoxy; and -dimethylaminoethoxyethoxy. The sugar moiety can be a pyranose or derivative thereof, or a deoxypyranose or derivative thereof, preferably a ribose or a derivative thereof, or a deoxyribose or a derivative thereof. Such preferred derivatized sugar moieties comprise Locked Nucleic Acid (LNA), in which the 2′-carbon atom is linked to the 3′ or 4′ carbon atom of the sugar ring thereby forming a bicyclic sugar moiety. A preferred LNA comprises 2′-O, 4′-C-ethylene-bridged nucleic acid (Morita et al. 2001. Nucleic Acid Res Supplement No. 1: 241-242). These substitutions render the nucleotide analogue or equivalent RNase H and nuclease resistant and increase the affinity for the target RNA.


It is understood by a skilled person that it is not necessary for all positions in an antisense oligonucleotide to be modified uniformly. In addition, more than one of the aforementioned analogues or equivalents may be incorporated in a single antisense oligonucleotide or even at a single position within an antisense oligonucleotide. In certain embodiments, an antisense oligonucleotide of the invention has at least two different types of analogues or equivalents.


A preferred antisense oligonucleotide according to the invention comprises a 2′-0 alkyl phosphorothioate antisense oligonucleotide, such as 2′-O-methyl modified ribose (RNA), 2′-O-ethyl modified ribose, 2′-O-propyl modified ribose, and/or substituted derivatives of these modifications such as halogenated derivatives.


A most preferred antisense oligonucleotide according to the invention comprises of 2′-O-methyl phosphorothioate ribose.


A functional equivalent of a molecule of the invention may be defined as an oligonucleotide as defined herein wherein an activity of said functional equivalent is retained to at least some extent. Preferably, an activity of said functional equivalent is inducing exon 43, 46, 50, 51, 52, or 53 skipping and providing a functional dystrophin protein. Said activity of said functional equivalent is therefore preferably assessed by detection of exon 43, 46, 50, 51, 52, or 53 skipping and by quantifying the amount of functional dystrophin protein. A functional dystrophin is herein preferably defined as being a dystrophin able to bind actin and members of the DGC protein complex. The assessment of said activity of an oligonucleotide is preferably done by RT-PCR or by immunofluorescence or Western blot analyses. Said activity is preferably retained to at least some extent when it represents at least 50%, or at least 60%, or at least 70% or at least 80% or at least 90% or at least 95% or more of corresponding activity of said oligonucleotide the functional equivalent derives from. Throughout this application, when the word oligonucleotide is used it may be replaced by a functional equivalent thereof as defined herein.


It will be understood by a skilled person that distinct antisense oligonucleotides can be combined for efficiently skipping any of exon 43, exon 46, exon 50, exon 51, exon 52 and/or exon 53 of the human DMD pre-mRNA. It is encompassed by the present invention to use one, two, three, four, five or more oligonucleotides for skipping one of said exons (i.e., exon, 43, 46, 50, 51, 52, or 53). It is also encompassed to use at least two oligonucleotides for skipping at least two, of said exons. Preferably two of said exons are skipped. More preferably, these two exons are:

    • 43 and 51, or
    • 43 and 53, or
    • 50 and 51, or
    • 51 and 52, or
    • 52 and 53.


The skilled person will know which combination of exons is preferred to be skipped depending on the type, the number and the location of the mutation present in a DMD or BMD patient.


An antisense oligonucleotide can be linked to a moiety that enhances uptake of the antisense oligonucleotide in cells, preferably muscle cells. Examples of such moieties are cholesterols, carbohydrates, vitamins, biotin, lipids, phospholipids, cell-penetrating peptides including but not limited to antennapedia, TAT, transportan and positively charged amino acids such as oligoarginine, poly-arginine, oligolysine or polylysine, antigen-binding domains such as provided by an antibody, a Fab fragment of an antibody, or a single chain antigen binding domain such as a cameloid single domain antigen-binding domain.


A preferred antisense oligonucleotide comprises a peptide-linked PMO.


A preferred antisense oligonucleotide comprising one or more nucleotide analogs or equivalents of the invention modulates splicing in one or more muscle cells, including heart muscle cells, upon systemic delivery. In this respect, systemic delivery of an antisense oligonucleotide comprising a specific nucleotide analog or equivalent might result in targeting a subset of muscle cells, while an antisense oligonucleotide comprising a distinct nucleotide analog or equivalent might result in targeting of a different subset of muscle cells. Therefore, in one embodiment it is preferred to use a combination of antisense oligonucleotides comprising different nucleotide analogs or equivalents for inducing skipping of exon 43, 46, 50, 51, 52, or 53 of the human DMD pre-mRNA.


A cell can be provided with a molecule capable of interfering with essential sequences that result in highly efficient skipping of exon 43, exon 46, exon 50, exon 51, exon 52 or exon 53 of the human DMD pre-mRNA by plasmid-derived antisense oligonucleotide expression or viral expression provided by adenovirus- or adeno-associated virus-based vectors. In a preferred embodiment, there is provided a viral-based expression vector comprising an expression cassette that drives expression of a molecule as identified herein. Expression is preferably driven by a polymerase III promoter, such as a U1, a U6, or a U7 RNA promoter. A muscle or myogenic cell can be provided with a plasmid for antisense oligonucleotide expression by providing the plasmid in an aqueous solution. Alternatively, a plasmid can be provided by transfection using known transfection agentia such as, for example, LipofectAMINE™ 2000 (Invitrogen) or polyethyleneimine (PEI; ExGen500 (MBI Fermentas)), or derivatives thereof.


One preferred antisense oligonucleotide expression system is an adenovirus associated virus (AAV)-based vector. Single chain and double chain AAV-based vectors have been developed that can be used for prolonged expression of small antisense nucleotide sequences for highly efficient skipping of exon 43, 46, 50, 51, 52 or 53 of the DMD pre-mRNA.


A preferred AAV-based vector comprises an expression cassette that is driven by a polymerase III-promoter (Pol III). A preferred Pol III promoter is, for example, a U1, a U6, or a U7 RNA promoter.


The invention therefore also provides a viral-based vector, comprising a Pol III-promoter driven expression cassette for expression of one or more antisense sequences of the invention for inducing skipping of exon 43, exon 46, exon 50, exon 51, exon 52 or exon 53 of the human DMD pre-mRNA.


PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITION

If required, a molecule or a vector expressing an antisense oligonucleotide of the invention can be incorporated into a pharmaceutically active mixture or composition by adding a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


Therefore, in a further aspect, the invention provides a composition, preferably a pharmaceutical composition comprising a molecule comprising an antisense oligonucleotide according to the invention, and/or a viral-based vector expressing the antisense sequence(s) according to the invention and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


A preferred pharmaceutical composition comprises a molecule as defined herein and/or a vector as defined herein, and a pharmaceutical acceptable carrier or excipient, optionally combined with a molecule and/or a vector as defined herein which is able to induce skipping of exon 6, 7, 11, 17, 19, 21, 43, 44, 45, 50, 51, 52, 53, 55, 57, 59, 62, 63, 65, 66, 69, or 75 of the DMD pre-mRNA. Preferred molecules able to induce skipping of any of these exon are identified in any one of Tables 1 to 7.


Preferred excipients include excipients capable of forming complexes, vesicles and/or liposomes that deliver such a molecule as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide complexed or trapped in a vesicle or liposome through a cell membrane. Many of these excipients are known in the art. Suitable excipients comprise polyethylenimine and derivatives, or similar cationic polymers, including polypropyleneimine or polyethylenimine copolymers (PECs) and derivatives, ExGen 500, synthetic amphiphils (SAINT-18), lipofectin™, DOTAP and/or viral capsid proteins that are capable of self-assembly into particles that can deliver such molecule, preferably an oligonucleotide as defined herein to a cell, preferably a muscle cell. Such excipients have been shown to efficiently deliver (oligonucleotide such as antisense) nucleic acids to a wide variety of cultured cells, including muscle cells. Their high transfection potential is combined with an excepted low to moderate toxicity in terms of overall cell survival. The ease of structural modification can be used to allow further modifications and the analysis of their further (in vivo) nucleic acid transfer characteristics and toxicity.


Lipofectin represents an example of a liposomal transfection agent. It consists of two lipid components, a cationic lipid N-[1-(2,3 dioleoyloxy)propyl]-N,N,N-trimethylammonium chloride (DOTMA) (cp. DOTAP which is the methylsulfate salt) and a neutral lipid dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE). The neutral component mediates the intracellular release. Another group of delivery systems are polymeric nanoparticles.


Polycations such like diethylaminoethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-dextran, which are well known as DNA transfection reagent can be combined with butylcyanoacrylate (PBCA) and hexylcyanoacrylate (PHCA) to formulate cationic nanoparticles that can deliver a molecule or a compound as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide across cell membranes into cells.


In addition to these common nanoparticle materials, the cationic peptide protamine offers an alternative approach to formulate a compound as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide as colloids. This colloidal nanoparticle system can form so called proticles, which can be prepared by a simple self-assembly process to package and mediate intracellular release of a compound as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide. The skilled person may select and adapt any of the above or other commercially available alternative excipients and delivery systems to package and deliver a compound as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide for use in the current invention to deliver said compound for the treatment of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy or Becker Muscular Dystrophy in humans.


In addition, a compound as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide could be covalently or non-covalently linked to a targeting ligand specifically designed to facilitate the uptake into the cell, cytoplasm and/or its nucleus. Such ligand could comprise (i) a compound (including but not limited to peptide(-like) structures) recognizing cell, tissue or organ specific elements facilitating cellular uptake and/or (ii) a chemical compound able to facilitate the uptake into cells and/or the intracellular release of a compound as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide from vesicles, e.g. endosomes or lysosomes.


Therefore, in a preferred embodiment, a compound as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide are formulated in a medicament which is provided with at least an excipient and/or a targeting ligand for delivery and/or a delivery device of said compound to a cell and/or enhancing its intracellular delivery. Accordingly, the invention also encompasses a pharmaceutically acceptable composition comprising a compound as defined herein, preferably an oligonucleotide and further comprising at least one excipient and/or a targeting ligand for delivery and/or a delivery device of said compound to a cell and/or enhancing its intracellular delivery. It is to be understood that a molecule or compound or oligonucleotide may not be formulated in one single composition or preparation. Depending on their identity, the skilled person will know which type of formulation is the most appropriate for each compound.


In a preferred embodiment, an in vitro concentration of a molecule or an oligonucleotide as defined herein, which is ranged between 0.1 nM and 1 μM is used. More preferably, the concentration used is ranged between 0.3 to 400 nM, even more preferably between 1 to 200 nM. A molecule or an oligonucleotide as defined herein may be used at a dose which is ranged between 0.1 and 20 mg/kg, preferably 0.5 and 10 mg/kg. If several molecules or oligonucleotides are used, these concentrations may refer to the total concentration of oligonucleotides or the concentration of each oligonucleotide added. The ranges of concentration of oligonucleotide(s) as given above are preferred concentrations for in vitro or ex vivo uses. The skilled person will understand that depending on the oligonucleotide(s) used, the target cell to be treated, the gene target and its expression levels, the medium used and the transfection and incubation conditions, the concentration of oligonucleotide(s) used may further vary and may need to be optimized any further.


More preferably, a compound preferably an oligonucleotide to be used in the invention to prevent, treat DMD or BMD are synthetically produced and administered directly to a cell, a tissue, an organ and/or patients in formulated form in a pharmaceutically acceptable composition or preparation. The delivery of a pharmaceutical composition to the subject is preferably carried out by one or more parenteral injections, e.g., intravenous and/or subcutaneous and/or intramuscular and/or intrathecal and/or intraventricular administrations, preferably injections, at one or at multiple sites in the human body.


A preferred oligonucleotide as defined herein optionally comprising one or more nucleotide analogs or equivalents of the invention modulates splicing in one or more muscle cells, including heart muscle cells, upon systemic delivery. In this respect, systemic delivery of an oligonucleotide comprising a specific nucleotide analog or equivalent might result in targeting a subset of muscle cells, while an oligonucleotide comprising a distinct nucleotide analog or equivalent might result in targeting of a different subset of muscle cells.


In this respect, systemic delivery of an oligonucleotide comprising a specific nucleotide analog or equivalent might result in targeting a subset of muscle cells, while an oligonucleotide comprising a distinct nucleotide analog or equivalent might result in targeting a different subset of muscle cells. Therefore, in this embodiment, it is preferred to use a combination of oligonucleotides comprising different nucleotide analogs or equivalents for modulating splicing of the DMD mRNA in at least one type of muscle cells.


In a preferred embodiment, there is provided a molecule or a viral-based vector for use as a medicament, preferably for modulating splicing of the DMD pre-mRNA, more preferably for promoting or inducing skipping of any of exon 43, 46, 50-53 as identified herein.


Use

In yet a further aspect, the invention provides the use of an antisense oligonucleotide or molecule according to the invention, and/or a viral-based vector that expresses one or more antisense sequences according to the invention and/or a pharmaceutical composition, for modulating splicing of the DMD pre-mRNA. The splicing is preferably modulated in a human myogenic cell or muscle cell in vitro. More preferred is that splicing is modulated in a human muscle cell in vivo. Accordingly, the invention further relates to the use of the molecule as defined herein and/or the vector as defined herein and/or or the pharmaceutical composition as defined herein for modulating splicing of the DMD pre-mRNA or for the preparation of a medicament for the treatment of a DMD or BMD patient.


In this document and in its claims, the verb “to comprise” and its conjugations is used in its non-limiting sense to mean that items following the word are included, but items not specifically mentioned are not excluded. In addition, the verb “to consist” may be replaced by “to consist essentially of” meaning that a molecule or a viral-based vector or a composition as defined herein may comprise additional component(s) than the ones specifically identified, said additional component(s) not altering the unique characteristic of the invention. In addition, reference to an element by the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude the possibility that more than one of the element is present, unless the context clearly requires that there be one and only one of the elements. The indefinite article “a” or “an” thus usually means “at least one”. Each embodiment as identified herein may be combined together unless otherwise indicated. All patent and literature references cited in the present specification are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.


The following examples are offered for illustrative purposes only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention in any way.


EXAMPLES
Examples 1-4
Materials and Methods

AON design was based on (partly) overlapping open secondary structures of the target exon RNA as predicted by them-fold program, on (partly) overlapping putative SR-protein binding sites as predicted by the ESE-finder software. AONs were synthesized by Prosensa Therapeutics B.V. (Leiden, Netherlands), and contain 2′-O-methyl RNA and full-length phosphorothioate (PS) backbones.


Tissue Culturing, Transfection and RT-PCR Analysis

Myotube cultures derived from a healthy individual (“human control”) (examples 1, 3, and 4; exon 43, 50, 52 skipping) or a DMD patient carrying an exon 45 deletion (example 2; exon 46 skipping) were processed as described previously (Aartsma-Rus et al., Neuromuscul. Disord. 2002; 12: S71-77 and Hum Mol Genet 2003; 12(8): 907-14). For the screening of AONs, myotube cultures were transfected with 50 nM and 150 nM (example 2), 200 nM and 500 nM (example 4) or 500 nM only (examples 1 and 3) of each AON. Transfection reagent UNIFectylin (Prosensa Therapeutics BV, Netherlands) was used, with 2 μl UNIFectylin per μg AON. Exon skipping efficiencies were determined by nested RT-PCR analysis using primers in the exons flanking the targeted exons (43, 46, 50, 51, 52, or 53). PCR fragments were isolated from agarose gels for sequence verification. For quantification, the PCR products were analyzed using the DNA 1000 LabChips Kit on the Agilent 2100 bioanalyzer (Agilent Technologies, USA).


Results
DMD Exon 43 Skipping.

A series of AONs targeting sequences within exon 43 were designed and transfected in healthy control myotube cultures. Subsequent RT-PCR and sequence analysis of isolated RNA demonstrated that almost all AONs targeting a continuous nucleotide stretch within exon 43 herein defined as SEQ ID NO 2, was indeed capable of inducing exon 43 skipping. PS237 (SEQ ID NO: 65) reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 43 skipping (up to 66%) at 500 nM, as shown in FIG. 1. For comparison, also PS238 and PS240 are shown, inducing exon 43 skipping levels up to 13% and 36% respectively (FIG. 1). The precise skipping of exon 43 was confirmed by sequence analysis of the novel smaller transcript fragments. No exon 43 skipping was observed in non-treated cells (NT).


DMD Exon 46 Skipping.

A series of AONs targeting sequences within exon 46 were designed and transfected in myotube cultures derived from a DMD patient carrying an exon 45 deletion in the DMD gene. For patients with such mutation antisense-induced exon 46 skipping would induce the synthesis of a novel, BMD-like dystrophin protein that may indeed alleviate one or more symptoms of the disease. Subsequent RT-PCR and sequence analysis of isolated RNA demonstrated that almost all AONs targeting a continuous nucleotide stretch within exon 46 herein defined as SEQ ID NO 3, was indeed capable of inducing exon 46 skipping, even at relatively low AON concentrations of 50 nM. PS182 (SEQ ID NO: 117) reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 46 skipping (up to 50% at 50 nM and 74% at 150 nM), as shown in FIG. 2. For comparison, also PS177, PS179, and PS181 are shown, inducing exon 46 skipping levels up to 55%, 58% and 42% respectively at 150 nM (FIG. 2). The precise skipping of exon 46 was confirmed by sequence analysis of the novel smaller transcript fragments. No exon 46 skipping was observed in non-treated cells (NT).


DMD Exon 50 Skipping.

A series of AONs targeting sequences within exon 50 were designed and transfected in healthy control myotube cultures. Subsequent RT-PCR and sequence analysis of isolated RNA demonstrated that almost all AONs targeting a continuous nucleotide stretch within exon 50 herein defined as SEQ ID NO 4, was indeed capable of inducing exon 50 skipping. PS248 (SEQ ID NO: 127) reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 50 skipping (up to 35% at 500 nM), as shown in FIG. 3. For comparison, also PS245, PS246, and PS247 are shown, inducing exon 50 skipping levels up to 14-16% at 500 nM (FIG. 3). The precise skipping of exon 50 was confirmed by sequence analysis of the novel smaller transcript fragments. No exon 50 skipping was observed in non-treated cells (NT).


DMD Exon 51 Skipping

A series of AONs targeting sequences within exon 51 were designed and transfected in healthy control myotube cultures. Subsequent RT-PCR and sequence analysis of isolated RNA demonstrated that almost all AONs targeting a continuous nucleotide stretch within exon 51 herein defined as SEQ ID NO 5, was indeed capable of inducing exon 51 skipping. The AON with SEQ ID NO 180 reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 51 skipping (not shown).


DMD Exon 52 Skipping.

A series of AONs targeting sequences within exon 52 were designed and transfected in healthy control myotube cultures. Subsequent RT-PCR and sequence analysis of isolated RNA demonstrated that almost all AONs targeting a continuous nucleotide stretch within exon 52 herein defined as SEQ ID NO 6, was indeed capable of inducing exon 52 skipping. PS236 (SEQ ID NO: 299) reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 52 skipping (up to 88% at 200 nM and 91% at 500 nM), as shown in FIG. 4. For comparison, also PS232 and AON 52-1 (previously published by Aartsma-Rus et al. Oligonucleotides 2005) are shown, inducing exon 52 skipping at levels up to 59% and 10% respectively when applied at 500 nM (FIG. 4). The precise skipping of exon 52 was confirmed by sequence analysis of the novel smaller transcript fragments. No exon 52 skipping was observed in non-treated cells (NT).


DMD Exon 53 Skipping

A series of AONs targeting sequences within exon 53 were designed and transfected in healthy control myotube cultures. Subsequent RT-PCR and sequence analysis of isolated RNA demonstrated that almost all AONs targeting a continuous nucleotide stretch within exon 53 herein defined as SEQ ID NO 7, was indeed capable of inducing exon 53 skipping. The AON with SEQ ID NO 328 reproducibly induced highest levels of exon 53 skipping (not shown).












SEQUENCE LISTING:















DMD GENE AMINO ACID SEQUENCE


SEQ ID NO 1:


MLWWEEVEDCYEREDVQKKTFTKWVNAQFSKFGKQHIENLFSDLQDGRRLLDLLEGL


TGQKLPKEKGSTRVHALNNVNKALRVLQNNNVDLVNIGSTDIVDGNHKLTLGLIWNIIL


HWQVKNVMKNIMAGLQQTNSEKILLSWVRQSTRNYPQVNVINFTTSWSDGLALNALIH


SHRPDLFDWNSVVCQQSATQRLEHAFNIARYQLGIEKLLDPEDVDTTYPDKKSILMYITS


LFQVLPQQVSIEAIQEVEMLPRPPKVTKEEHFQLHHQMHYSQQITVSLAQGYERTSSPKP


RFKSYAYTQAAYVTTSDPTRSPFPSQHLEAPEDKSFGSSLMESEVNLDRYQTALEEVLS


WLLSAEDTLQAQGEISNDVEVVKDQFHTHEGYMMDLTAHQGRVGNILQLGSKLIGTGK


LSEDEETEVQEQMNLLNSRWECLRVASMEKQSNLHRVLMDLQNQKLKELNDWLTKTE


ERTRKMEEEPLGPDLEDLKRQVQQHKVLQEDLEQEQVRVNSLTHMVVVVDESSGDHA


TAALEEQLKVLGDRWANICRWTEDRWVLLQDILLKWQRLTEEQCLFSAWLSEKEDAV


NKIHTTGFKDQNEMLSSLQKLAVLKADLEKKKQSMGKLYSLKQDLLSTLKNKSVTQKT


EAWLDNFARCWDNLVQKLEKSTAQISQAVTTTQPSLTQTTVMETVTTVTTREQILVKH


AQEELPPPPPQKKRQITVDSEIRKRLDVDITELHSWITRSEAVLQSPEFAIFRKEGNFSDLK


EKVNAIEREKAEKFRKLQDASRSAQALVEQMVNEGVNADSIKQASEQLNSRWIEFCQLL


SERLNWLEYQNNIIAFYNQLQQLEQMTTTAENWLKIQPTTPSEPTAIKSQLKICKDEVNR


LSGLQPQIERLKIQSIALKEKGQGPMFLDADFVAFTNHFKQVFSDVQAREKELQTIFDTL


PPMRYQETMSAIRTWVQQSETKLSIPQLSVTDYEIMEQRLGELQALQSSLQEQQSGLYY


LSTTVKEMSKKAPSEISRKYQSEFEEIEGRWKKLSSQLVEHCQKLEEQMNKLRKIQNHIQ


TLKKWMAEVDVFLKEEWPALGDSEILKKQLKQCRLLVSDIQTIQPSLNSVNEGGQKIKN


EAEPEFASRLETELKELNTQWDHMCQQVYARKEALKGGLEKTVSLQKDLSEMHEWMT


QAEEEYLERDFEYKTPDELQKAVEEMKRAKEEAQQKEAKVKLLTESVNSVIAQAPPVA


QEALKKELETLTTNYQWLCTRLNGKCKTLEEVWACWHELLSYLEKANKWLNEVEFKL


KTTENIPGGAEEISEVLDSLENLMRHSEDNPNQIRILAQTLTDGGVMDELINEELETFNSR


WRELHEEAVRRQKLLEQSIQSAQETEKSLHLIQESLTFIDKQLAAYIADKVDAAQMPQE


AQKIQSDLTSHEISLEEMKKHNQGKEAAQRVLSQIDVAQKKLQDVSMKFRLFQKPANFE


QRLQESKMILDEVKMHLPALETKSVEQEVVQSQLNHCVNLYKSLSEVKSEVEMVIKTG


RQIVQKKQTENPKELDERVTALKLHYNELGAKVTERKQQLEKCLKLSRKMRKEMNVL


TEWLAATDMELTKRSAVEGMPSNLDSEVAWGKATQKEIEKQKVHLKSITEVGEALKTV


LGKKETLVEDKLSLLNSNWIAVTSRAEEWLNLLLEYQKHMETFDQNVDHITKWIIQADT


LLDESEKKKPQQKEDVLKRLKAELNDIRPKVDSTRDQAANLMANRGDHCRKLVEPQIS


ELNHRFAAISHRIKTGKASIPLKELEQFNSDIQKLLEPLEAEIQQGVNLKEEDFNKDMNED


NEGTVKELLQRGDNLQQRITDERKREEIKIKQQLLQTKHNALKDLRSQRRKKALEISHQ


WYQYKRQADDLLKCLDDIEKKLASLPEPRDERKIKEIDRELQKKKEELNAVRRQAEGLS


EDGAAMAVEPTQIQLSKRWREIESKFAQFRRLNFAQIHTVREETMMVMTEDMPLEISYV


PSTYLTEITHVSQALLEVEQLLNAPDLCAKDFEDLFKQEESLKNIKDSLQQSSGRIDIIHSK


KTAALQSATPVERVKLQEALSQLDFQWEKVNKMYKDRQGRFDRSVEKWRRFHYDIKIF


NQWLTEAEQFLRKTQIPENWEHAKYKWYLKELQDGIGQRQTVVRTLNATGEEIIQQSSK


TDASILQEKLGSLNLRWQEVCKQLSDRKKRLEEQKNILSEFQRDLNEFVLWLEEADNIA


SIPLEPGKEQQLKEKLEQVKLLVEELPLRQGILKQLNETGGPVLVSAPISPEEQDKLENKL


KQTNLQWIKVSRALPEKQGEIEAQIKDLGQLEKKLEDLEEQLNHLLLWLSPIRNQLEIYN


QPNQEGPFDVQETEIAVQAKQPDVEEILSKGQHLYKEKPATQPVKRKLEDLSSEWKAVN


RLLQELRAKQPDLAPGLTTIGASPTQTVTLVTQPVVTKETAISKLEMPSSLMLEVPALAD


FNRAWTELTDWLSLLDQVIKSQRVMVGDLEDINEMIIKQKATMQDLEQRRPQLEELITA


AQNLKNKTSNQEARTIITDRIERIQNQWDEVQEHLQNRRQQLNEMLKDSTQWLEAKEE


AEQVLGQARAKLESWKEGPYTVDAIQKKITETKQLAKDLRQWQTNVDVANDLALKLL


RDYSADDTRKVHMITENINASWRSIHKRVSEREAALEETHRLLQQFPLDLEKFLAWLTE


AETTANVLQDATRKERLLEDSKGVKELMKQWQDLQGEIEAHTDVYHNLDENSQKILRS


LEGSDDAVLLQRRLDNMNFKWSELRKKSLNIRSHLEASSDQWKRLHLSLQELLVWLQL


KDDELSRQAPIGGDFPAVQKQNDVHRAFKRELKTKEPVIMSTLETVRIFLTEQPLEGLEK


LYQEPRELPPEERAQNVTRLLRKQAEEVNTEWEKLNLHSADWQRKIDETLERLQELQEA


TDELDLKLRQAEVIKGSWQPVGDLLIDSLQDHLEKVKALRGEIAPLKENVSHVNDLARQ


LTTLGIQLSPYNLSTLEDLNTRWKLLQVAVEDRVRQLHEAHRDFGPASQHELSTSVQGP


WERAISPNKVPYYINHETQTTCWDHPKMTELYQSLADLNNVRFSAYRTAMKLRRLQKA


LCLDLLSLSAACDALDQHNLKQNDQPMDILQIINCLTTIYDRLEQEHNNLVNVPLCVDM


CLNWLLNVYDTGRTGRIRVLSFKTGIISLCKAHLEDKYRYLFKQVASSTGFCDQRRLGL


LLHDSIQIPRQLGEVASFGGSNIEPSVRSCFQFANNKPEIEAALFLDWMRLEPQSMVWLP


VLHRVAAAETAKHQAKCNICKECPIIGFRYRSLKHFNYDICQSCFFSGRVAKGHKMHYP


MVEYCTPTTSGEDVRDFAKVLKNKFRTKRYFAKHPRMGYLPVQTVLEGDNMETPVTLI


NFWPVDSAPASSPQLSHDDTHSRIEHYASRLAEMENSNGSYLNDSISPNESIDDEHLLIQH


YCQSLNQDSPLSQPRSPAQILISLESEERGELERILADLEEENRNLQAEYDRLKQQHEHKG


LSPLPSPPEMMPTSPQSPRDAELIAEAKLLRQHKGRLEARMQILEDHNKQLESQLHRLRQ


LLEQPQAEAKVNGTTVSSPSTSLQRSDSSQPMLLRVVGSQTSDSMGEEDLLSPPQDTSTG


LEEVMEQLNNSFPSSRGRNTPGKPMREDTM





SEQ ID NO 2 (EXON 43):


AGAUAGUCUACAACAAAGCUCAGGUCGGAUUGACAUUAUUCAUAGCAAGAAGAC


AG CAGCAUUGCAMGUGCAACGCCUGUGG





SEQ ID NO 3 (EXON 46):


UUAUGGUUGGAGGAAGCAGAUAACAUUGCUAGUAUCCCACUUGAACCUGGAMAG


AGCAGCAACUAAAAGAMAGC





SEQ ID NO 4 (EXON 50):


GGCGGUAMCCGUUUACUUCAAGAGCUGAGGGCAAAGCAGCCUGACCUAGCUCCU


GGACUGACCACUAUUGG





SEQ ID NO 5 (EXON 51):


CUCCUACUCAGACUGUUACUCUGGUGACACAACCUGUGGUUACUAAGGAMCUGC


CAUCUCCAAACUAGAAAUGCCAUCUUCCUUGAUGUUGGAGGUAC





SEQ ID NO 6 (EXON 52):


AUGCAGGAUUUGGAACAGAGGCGUCCCCAGUUGGAAGAACUCAUUACCGCUGCCC


AAAAUUU GAAAAACAAGACCAGCAAUCAAGAGGCU





SEQ ID NO 7 (EXON 53):


AAAUGUUAAAGGAUUCAACACAAUGGCUGGAAGCUAAGGAAGAAGCUGAGCAGG


UCUUAGGA CAGGCCAGAG
















TABLE 1





OLIGONUCLEOTIDES FOR SKIPPING DMD GENE EXON 43


















SEQ ID
CCACAGGCGUUGCACUUUGCA
SEQ ID
UCUUCUUGCUAUGAAUAAUGUC


NO 8
AUGC
NO 39
AAU





SEQ ID
CACAGGCGUUGCACUUUGCAA
SEQ ID
CUUCUUGCUAUGAAUAAUGUCA


NO 9
UGCU
NO 40
AUC





SEQ ID
ACAGGCGUUGCACUUUGCAAU
SEQ ID
UUCUUGCUAUGAAUAAUGUCAA


NO 10
GCUG
NO 41
UCC





SEQ ID
CAGGCGUUGCACUUUGCAAUG
SEQ ID
UCUUGCUAUGAAUAAUGUCAAU


NO 11
CUGC
NO 42
CCG





SEQ ID
AGGCGUUGCACUUUGCAAUGC
SEQ ID
CUUGCUAUGAAUAAUGUCAAUC


NO 12
UGCU
NO 43
CGA





SEQ ID
GGCGUUGCACUUUGCAAUGCU
SEQ ID
UUGCUAUGAAUAAUGUCAAUCC


NO 13
GCUG
NO 44
GAC





SEQ ID
GCGUUGCACUUUGCAAUGCUG
SEQ ID
UGCUAUGAAUAAUGUCAAUCCG


NO 14
CUGU
NO 45
ACC





SEQ ID
CGUUGCACUUUGCAAUGCUGC
SEQ ID
GCUAUGAAUAAUGUCAAUCCGA


NO 15
UGUC
NO 46
CCU





SEQ ID
CGUUGCACUUUGCAAUGCUGC
SEQ ID
CUAUGAAUAAUGUCAAUCCGACC


NO 16
UG
NO 47
UG


PS240








SEQ ID
GUUGCACUUUGCAAUGCUGCU
SEQ ID
UAUGAAUAAUGUCAAUCCGACC


NO 17
GUCU
NO 48
UGA





SEQ ID
UUGCACUUUGCAAUGCUGCUG
SEQ ID
AUGAAUAAUGUCAAUCCGACCU


NO 18
UCUU
NO 49
GAG





SEQ ID
UGCACUUUGCAAUGCUGCUGU
SEQ ID
UGAAUAAUGUCAAUCCGACCUG


NO 19
CUUC
NO 50
AGC





SEQ ID
GCACUUUGCAAUGCUGCUGUC
SEQ ID
GAAUAAUGUCAAUCCGACCUGA


NO 20
UUCU
NO 51
GCU





SEQ ID
CACUUUGCAAUGCUGCUGUCU
SEQ ID
AAUAAUGUCAAUCCGACCUGAGC


NO 21
UCUU
NO 52
UU





SEQ ID
ACUUUGCAAUGCUGCUGUCUU
SEQ ID
AUAAUGUCAAUCCGACCUGAGCU


NO 22
CUUG
NO 53
UU





SEQ ID
CUUUGCAAUGCUGCUGUCUUC
SEQ ID
UAAUGUCAAUCCGACCUGAGCUU


NO 23
UUGC
NO 54
UG





SEQ ID
UUUGCAAUGCUGCUGUCUUCU
SEQ ID
AAUGUCAAUCCGACCUGAGCUUU


NO 24
UGCU
NO 55
GU





SEQ ID
UUGCAAUGCUGCUGUCUUCUU
SEQ ID
AUGUCAAUCCGACCUGAGCUUUG


NO 25
GCUA
NO 56
UU





SEQ ID
UGCAAUGCUGCUGUCUUCUUG
SEQ ID
UGUCAAUCCGACCUGAGCUUUGU


NO 26
CUAU
NO 57
UG





SEQ ID
GCAAUGCUGCUGUCUUCUUGC
SEQ ID
GUCAAUCCGACCUGAGCUUUGUU


NO 27
UAUG
NO 58
GU





SEQ ID
CAAUGCUGCUGUCUUCUUGCU
SEQ ID
UCAAUCCGACCUGAGCUUUGUUG


NO 28
AUGA
NO 59
UA





SEQ ID
AAUGCUGCUGUCUUCUUGCUA
SEQ ID
CAAUCCGACCUGAGCUUUGUUGU


NO 29
UGAA
NO 60
AG





SEQ ID
AUGCUGCUGUCUUCUUGCUAU
SEQ ID
AAUCCGACCUGAGCUUUGUUGU


NO 30
GAAU
NO 61
AGA





SEQ ID
UGCUGCUGUCUUCUUGCUAUG
SEQ ID
AUCCGACCUGAGCUUUGUUGUA


NO 31
AAUA
NO 62
GAC





SEQ ID
GCUGCUGUCUUCUUGCUAUGA
SEQ ID
UCCGACCUGAGCUUUGUUGUAG


NO 32
AUAA
NO 63
ACU





SEQ ID
CUGCUGUCUUCUUGCUAUGAA
SEQ ID
CCGACCUGAGCUUUGUUGUAGAC


NO 33
UAAU
NO 64
UA





SEQ ID
UGCUGUCUUCUUGCUAUGAAU
SEQ ID
CGACCUGAGCUUUGUUGUAG


NO 34
AAUG
NO 65





PS237






SEQ ID
GCUGUCUUCUUGCUAUGAAUA
SEQ ID
CGACCUGAGCUUUGUUGUAGAC


NO 35
AUGU
NO 66
UAU




PS238






SEQ ID
CUGUCUUCUUGCUAUGAAUAA
SEQ ID
GACCUGAGCUUUGUUGUAGACU


NO 36
UGUC
NO 67
AUC





SEQ ID
UGUCUUCUUGCUAUGAAUAAU
SEQ ID
ACCUGAGCUUUGUUGUAGACUA


NO 37
GUCA
NO 68
UCA





SEQ ID
GUCUUCUUGCUAUGAAUAAUG
SEQ ID
CCUGA GCUUU GUUGU AGACU


NO 38
UCAA
NO 69
AUC
















TABLE 2





OLIGONUCLEOTIDES FOR SKIPPING DMD GENE EXON 46


















SEQ ID
GCUUUUCUUUUAGUUGCUGCUC
SEQ ID
CCAGGUUCAAGUGGGAUACUA


NO 70
UUU
NO 97
GCAA


PS179








SEQ ID
CUUUUCUUUUAGUUGCUGCUCU
SEQ ID
CAGGUUCAAGUGGGAUACUAG


NO 71
UUU
NO 98
CAAU





SEQ ID
UUUUCUUUUAGUUGCUGCUCU
SEQ ID
AGGUUCAAGUGGGAUACUAGC


NO 72
UUUC
NO 99
AAUG





SEQ ID
UUUCUUUUAGUUGCUGCUCUU
SEQ ID
GGUUCAAGUGGGAUACUAGCA


NO 73
UUCC
NO 100
AUGU





SEQ ID
UUCUUUUAGUUGCUGCUCUUU
SEQ ID
GUUCAAGUGGGAUACUAGCAA


NO 74
UCCA
NO 101
UGUU





SEQ ID
UCUUUUAGUUGCUGCUCUUUUC
SEQ ID
UUCAAGUGGGAUACUAGCAAU


NO 75
CAG
NO 102
GUUA





SEQ ID
CUUUUAGUUGCUGCUCUUUUCC
SEQ ID
UCAAGUGGGAUACUAGCAAUG


NO 76
AGG
NO 103
UUAU





SEQ ID
UUUUAGUUGCUGCUCUUUUCCA
SEQ ID
CAAGUGGGAUACUAGCAAUGU


NO 77
GGU
NO 104
UAUC





SEQ ID
UUUAGUUGCUGCUCUUUUCCAG
SEQ ID
AAGUGGGAUACUAGCAAUGUU


NO 78
GUU
NO 105
AUCU





SEQ ID
UUAGUUGCUGCUCUUUUCCAGG
SEQ ID
AGUGGGAUACUAGCAAUGUUA


NO 79
UUC
NO 106
UCUG





SEQ ID
UAGUUGCUGCUCUUUUCCAGGU
SEQ ID
GUGGGAUACUAGCAAUGUUAU


NO 80
UCA
NO 107
CUGC





SEQ ID
AGUUGCUGCUCUUUUCCAGGUU
SEQ ID
UGGGAUACUAGCAAUGUUAUC


NO 81
CAA
NO 108
UGCU





SEQ ID
GUUGCUGCUCUUUUCCAGGUUC
SEQ ID
GGGAUACUAGCAAUGUUAUCU


NO 82
AAG
NO 109
GCUU





SEQ ID
UUGCUGCUCUUUUCCAGGUUCA
SEQ ID
GGAUACUAGCAAUGUUAUCUG


NO 83
AGU
NO 110
CUUC




PS181






SEQ ID
UGCUGCUCUUUUCCAGGUUCAA
SEQ ID
GAUACUAGCAAUGUUAUCUGC


NO 84
GUG
NO 111
UUCC





SEQ ID
GCUGCUCUUUUCCAGGUUCAAG
SEQ ID
AUACUAGCAAUGUUAUCUGCU


NO 85
UGG
NO 112
UCCU





SEQ ID
CUGCUCUUUUCCAGGUUCAAGU
SEQ ID
UACUAGCAAUGUUAUCUGCUU


NO 86
GGG
NO 113
CCUC





SEQ ID
UGCUCUUUUCCAGGUUCAAGUG
SEQ ID
ACUAGCAAUGUUAUCUGCUUCC


NO 87
GGA
NO 114
UCC





SEQ ID
GCUCUUUUCCAGGUUCAAGUGG
SEQ ID
CUAGCAAUGUUAUCUGCUUCCU


NO 88
GAC
NO 115
CCA





SEQ ID
CUCUUUUCCAGGUUCAAGUGGG
SEQ ID
UAGCAAUGUUAUCUGCUUCCUC


NO 89
AUA
NO 116
CAA





SEQ ID
UCUUUUCCAGGUUCAAGUGGG
SEQ ID
AGCAAUGUUAUCUGCUUCCUCC


NO 90
AUAC
NO 117
AAC




PS182






SEQ ID
UCUUUUCCAGGUUCAAGUGG
SEQ ID
GCAAUGUUAUCUGCUUCCUCCA


NO 91

NO 118
ACC


PS177








SEQ ID
CUUUUCCAGGUUCAAGUGGGA
SEQ ID
CAAUGUUAUCUGCUUCCUCCAA


NO 92
UACU
NO 119
CCA





SEQ ID
UUUUCCAGGUUCAAGUGGGAU
SEQ ID
AAUGUUAUCUGCUUCCUCCAAC


NO 93
ACUA
NO 120
CAU





SEQ ID
UUUCCAGGUUCAAGUGGGAUA
SEQ ID
AUGUUAUCUGCUUCCUCCAACC


NO 94
CUAG
NO 121
AUA





SEQ ID
UUCCAGGUUCAAGUGGGAUAC
SEQ ID
UGUUAUCUGCUUCCUCCAACCA


NO 95
UAGC
NO 122
UAA





SEQ ID
UCCAGGUUCAAGUGGGAUACU




NO 96
AGCA
















TABLE 3





OLIGONUCLEOTIDES FOR SKIPPING DMD GENE EXON 50


















SEQ ID
CCAAUAGUGGUCAGUCCAGGA
SEQ ID
CUAGGUCAGGCUGCUUUGCCCU


NO 123
GCUA
NO 146
CAG





SEQ ID
CAAUAGUGGUCAGUCCAGGAG
SEQ ID
UAGGUCAGGCUGCUUUGCCCUC


NO 124
CUAG
NO 147
AGC





SEQ ID
AAUAGUGGUCAGUCCAGGAGC
SEQ ID
AGGUCAGGCUGCUUUGCCCUCA


NO 125
UAGG
NO 148
GCU





SEQ ID
AUAGUGGUCAGUCCAGGAGCU
SEQ ID
GGUCAGGCUGCUUUGCCCUCAG


NO 126
AGGU
NO 149
CUC





SEQ ID
AUAGUGGUCAGUCCAGGAGCU
SEQ ID
GUCAGGCUGCUUUGCCCUCAGC


NO 127

NO 150
UCU


PS248








SEQ ID
UAGUGGUCAGUCCAGGAGCUA
SEQ ID
UCAGGCUGCUUUGCCCUCAGCU


NO 128
GGUC
NO 151
CUU





SEQ ID
AGUGGUCAGUCCAGGAGCUAG
SEQ ID
CAGGCUGCUUUGCCCUCAGCUC


NO 129
GUCA
NO 152
UUG





SEQ ID
GUGGUCAGUCCAGGAGCUAGG
SEQ ID
AGGCUGCUUUGCCCUCAGCUCU


NO 130
UCAG
NO 153
UGA





SEQ ID
UGGUCAGUCCAGGAGCUAGGU
SEQ ID
GGCUGCUUUGCCCUCAGCUCUU


NO 131
CAGG
NO 154
GAA





SEQ ID
GGUCAGUCCAGGAGCUAGGUC
SEQ ID
GCUGCUUUGCCCUCAGCUCUUG


NO 132
AGGC
NO 155
AAG





SEQ ID
GUCAGUCCAGGAGCUAGGUCA
SEQ ID
CUGCUUUGCCCUCAGCUCUUGA


NO 133
GGCU
NO 156
AGU





SEQ ID
UCAGUCCAGGAGCUAGGUCAG
SEQ ID
UGCUUUGCCCUCAGCUCUUGAA


NO 134
GCUG
NO 157
GUA





SEQ ID
CAGUCCAGGAGCUAGGUCAGG
SEQ ID
GCUUUGCCCUCAGCUCUUGAAG


NO 135
CUGC
NO 158
UAA





SEQ ID
AGUCCAGGAGCUAGGUCAGGC
SEQ ID
CUUUGCCCUCAGCUCUUGAAGU


NO 136
UGCU
NO 159
AAA





SEQ ID
GUCCAGGAGCUAGGUCAGGCU
SEQ ID
UUUGCCCUCAGCUCUUGAAGU


NO 137
GCUU
NO 160
AAAC





SEQ ID
UCCAGGAGCUAGGUCAGGCUG
SEQ ID
UUGCCCUCAGCUCUUGAAGUA


NO 138
CUUU
NO 161
AACG





SEQ ID
CCAGGAGCUAGGUCAGGCUGC
SEQ ID
UGCCCUCAGCUCUUGAAGUAA


NO 139
UUUG
NO 162
ACGG





SEQ ID
CAGGAGCUAGGUCAGGCUGCU
SEQ ID
GCCCUCAGCUCUUGAAGUAAAC


NO 140
UUGC
NO 163
GGU





SEQ ID
AGGAGCUAGGUCAGGCUGCUU
SEQ ID
CCCUCAGCUCUUGAAGUAAACG


NO 141
UGCC
NO 164
GUU





SEQ ID
GGAGCUAGGUCAGGCUGCUUU
SEQ ID
CCUCAGCUCUUGAAGUAAAC


NO 142
GCCC
NO 165





PS246






SEQ ID
GAGCUAGGUCAGGCUGCUUUG
SEQ ID
CCUCAGCUCUUGAAGUAAACG


NO 143
CCCU
NO 166





PS247






SEQ ID
AGCUAGGUCAGGCUGCUUUGC
SEQ ID
CUCAGCUCUUGAAGUAAACG


NO 144
CCUC
NO 167





PS245






SEQ ID
GCUAGGUCAGGCUGCUUUGCC
SEQ ID
CCUCAGCUCUUGAAGUAAACG


NO 145
CUCA
NO 529
GUUU





SEQ ID
CUCAGCUCUUGAAGUAAACGG
SEQ ID
UCAGCUCUUGAAGUAAACGGU


NO 530
UUUA
NO 531
UUAC





SEQ ID
CAGCUCUUGAAGUAAACGGUU
SEQ ID
AGCUCUUGAAGUAAACGGUUU


NO 532
UACC
NO 533
ACCG





SEQ ID
GCUCUUGAAGUAAACGGUUUA
SEQ ID
CUCUUGAAGUAAACGGUUUAC


NO 534
CCGC
NO 535
CGCC
















TABLE 4





OLIGONUCLEOTIDES FOR SKIPPING DMD GENE EXON 51


















SEQ ID
GUACCUCCAACAUCAAGGAAGA
SEQ ID
GAGAUGGCAGUUUCCUUAGUAA


NO 168
UGG
NO 205
CCA





SEQ ID
UACCUCCAACAUCAAGGAAGAU
SEQ ID
AGAUGGCAGUUUCCUUAGUAAC


NO 169
GGC
NO 206
CAC





SEQ ID
ACCUCCAACAUCAAGGAAGAUG
SEQ ID
GAUGGCAGUUUCCUUAGUAACC


NO 170
GCA
NO 207
ACA





SEQ ID
CCUCCAACAUCAAGGAAGAUGG
SEQ ID
AUGGCAGUUUCCUUAGUAACCA


NO 171
CAU
NO 208
CAG





SEQ ID
CUCCAACAUCAAGGAAGAUGGC
SEQ ID
UGGCAGUUUCCUUAGUAACCAC


NO 172
AUU
NO 209
AGG





SEQ ID
UCCAACAUCAAGGAAGAUGGCA
SEQ ID
GGCAGUUUCCUUAGUAACCACA


NO 173
UUU
NO 210
GGU





SEQ ID
CCAACAUCAAGGAAGAUGGCAU
SEQ ID
GCAGUUUCCUUAGUAACCACAG


NO 174
UUC
NO 211
GUU





SEQ ID
CAACAUCAAGGAAGAUGGCAUU
SEQ ID
CAGUUUCCUUAGUAACCACAGG


NO 175
UCU
NO 212
UUG





SEQ ID
AACAUCAAGGAAGAUGGCAUUU
SEQ ID
AGUUUCCUUAGUAACCACAGGU


NO 176
CUA
NO 213
UGU





SEQ ID
ACAUCAAGGAAGAUGGCAUUUC
SEQ ID
GUUUCCUUAGUAACCACAGGUU


NO 177
UAG
NO 214
GUG





SEQ ID
CAUCAAGGAAGAUGGCAUUUCU
SEQ ID
UUUCCUUAGUAACCACAGGUUG


NO 178
AGU
NO 215
UGU





SEQ ID
AUCAAGGAAGAUGGCAUUUCUA
SEQ ID
UUCCUUAGUAACCACAGGUUGU


NO 179
GUU
NO 216
GUC





SEQ ID
UCAAGGAAGAUGGCAUUUCUAG
SEQ ID
UCCUUAGUAACCACAGGUUGUG


NO 180
UUU
NO 217
UCA





SEQ ID
CAAGGAAGAUGGCAUUUCUAGU
SEQ ID
CCUUAGUAACCACAGGUUGUGU


NO 181
UUG
NO 218
CAC





SEQ ID
AAGGAAGAUGGCAUUUCUAGUU
SEQ ID
CUUAGUAACCACAGGUUGUGUC


NO 182
UGG
NO 219
ACC





SEQ ID
AGGAAGAUGGCAUUUCUAGUUU
SEQ ID
UUAGUAACCACAGGUUGUGUCA


NO 183
GGA
NO 220
CCA





SEQ ID
GGAAGAUGGCAUUUCUAGUUUG
SEQ ID
UAGUAACCACAGGUUGUGUCAC


NO 184
GAG
NO 221
CAG





SEQ ID
GAAGAUGGCAUUUCUAGUUUGG
SEQ ID
AGUAACCACAGGUUGUGUCACC


NO 185
AGA
NO 222
AGA





SEQ ID
AAGAUGGCAUUUCUAGUUUGGA
SEQ ID
GUAACCACAGGUUGUGUCACCA


NO 186
GAU
NO 223
GAG





SEQ ID
AGAUGGCAUUUCUAGUUUGGAG
SEQ ID
UAACCACAGGUUGUGUCACCAG


NO 187
AUG
NO 224
AGU





SEQ ID
GAUGGCAUUUCUAGUUUGGAGA
SEQ ID
AACCACAGGUUGUGUCACCAGA


NO 188
UGG
NO 225
GUA





SEQ ID
AUGGCAUUUCUAGUUUGGAGAU
SEQ ID
ACCACAGGUUGUGUCACCAGAG


NO 189
GGC
NO 226
UAA





SEQ ID
UGGCAUUUCUAGUUUGGAGAUG
SEQ ID
CCACAGGUUGUGUCACCAGAGU


NO 190
GCA
NO 227
AAC





SEQ ID
GGCAUUUCUAGUUUGGAGAUGG
SEQ ID
CACAGGUUGUGUCACCAGAGUA


NO 191
CAG
NO 228
ACA





SEQ ID
GCAUUUCUAGUUUGGAGAUGGC
SEQ ID
ACAGGUUGUGUCACCAGAGUAA


NO 192
AGU
NO 229
CAG





SEQ ID
CAUUUCUAGUUUGGAGAUGGCA
SEQ ID
CAGGUUGUGUCACCAGAGUAAC


NO 193
GUU
NO 230
AGU





SEQ ID
AUUUCUAGUUUGGAGAUGGCAG
SEQ ID
AGGUUGUGUCACCAGAGUAACA


NO 194
UUU
NO 231
GUC





SEQ ID
UUUCUAGUUUGGAGAUGGCAGU
SEQ ID
GGUUGUGUCACCAGAGUAACAG


NO 195
UUC
NO 232
UCU





SEQ ID
UUCUAGUUUGGAGAUGGCAGUU
SEQ ID
GUUGUGUCACCAGAGUAACAGU


NO 196
UCC
NO 233
CUG





SEQ ID
UCUAGUUUGGAGAUGGCAGUUU
SEQ ID
UUGUGUCACCAGAGUAACAGUC


NO 197
CCU
NO 234
UGA





SEQ ID
CUAGUUUGGAGAUGGCAGUUUC
SEQ ID
UGUGUCACCAGAGUAACAGUCU


NO 198
CUU
NO 235
GAG





SEQ ID
UAGUUUGGAGAUGGCAGUUUCC
SEQ ID
GUGUCACCAGAGUAACAGUCUG


NO 199
UUA
NO 236
AGU





SEQ ID
AGUUUGGAGAUGGCAGUUUCCU
SEQ ID
UGUCACCAGAGUAACAGUCUGA


NO 200
UAG
NO 237
GUA





SEQ ID
GUUUGGAGAUGGCAGUUUCCUU
SEQ ID
GUCACCAGAGUAACAGUCUGAG


NO 201
AGU
NO 238
UAG





SEQ ID
UUUGGAGAUGGCAGUUUCCUUA
SEQ ID
UCACCAGAGUAACAGUCUGAGU


NO 202
GUA
NO 239
AGG





SEQ ID
UUGGAGAUGGCAGUUUCCUUAG
SEQ ID
CACCAGAGUAACAGUCUGAGUA


NO 203
UAA
NO 240
GGA





SEQ ID
UGGAGAUGGCAGUUUCCUUAGU
SEQ ID
ACCAGAGUAACAGUCUGAGUA


NO 204
AAC
NO 241
GGAG
















TABLE 5





OLIGONUCLEOTIDES FOR SKIPPING DMD GENE EXON 52


















SEQ ID
AGCCUCUUGAUUGCUGGUCUUG
SEQ ID
UUGGGCAGCGGUAAUGAGUUCU


NO 242
UUU
NO 277
UCC





SEQ ID
GCCUCUUGAUUGCUGGUCUUGU
SEQ ID
UGGGCAGCGGUAAUGAGUUCUU


NO 243
UUU
NO 278
CCA





SEQ ID
CCUCUUGAUUGCUGGUCUUGUU
SEQ ID
GGGCAGCGGUAAUGAGUUCUUC


NO 244
UUU
NO 279
CAA





SEQ ID
CCUCUUGAUUGCUGGUCUUG
SEQ ID
GGCAGCGGUAAUGAGUUCUUCC


NO 245

NO 280
AAC





SEQ ID
CUCUUGAUUGCUGGUCUUGUU
SEQ ID
GCAGCGGUAAUGAGUUCUUCCA


NO 246
UUUC
NO 281
ACU


PS232








SEQ ID
UCUUGAUUGCUGGUCUUGUUU
SEQ ID
CAGCGGUAAUGAGUUCUUCCAA


NO 247
UUCA
NO 282
CUG





SEQ ID
CUUGAUUGCUGGUCUUGUUUU
SEQ ID
AGCGGUAAUGAGUUCUUCCAAC


NO 248
UCAA
NO 283
UGG





SEQ ID
UUGAUUGCUGGUCUUGUUUUU
SEQ ID
GCGGUAAUGAGUUCUUCCAACU


NO 249
CAAA
NO 284
GGG





SEQ ID
UGAUUGCUGGUCUUGUUUUUC
SEQ ID
CGGUAAUGAGUUCUUCCAACUG


NO 250
AAAU
NO 285
GGG





SEQ ID
GAUUGCUGGUCUUGUUUUUCA
SEQ ID
GGUAAUGAGUUCUUCCAACUGG


NO 251
AAUU
NO 286
GGA





SEQ ID
GAUUGCUGGUCUUGUUUUUC
SEQ ID
GGUAAUGAGUUCUUCCAACUGG


NO 252

NO 287






SEQ ID
AUUGCUGGUCUUGUUUUUCAA
SEQ ID
GUAAUGAGUUCUUCCAACUGGG


NO 253
AUUU
NO 288
GAC





SEQ ID
UUGCUGGUCUUGUUUUUCAAA
SEQ ID
UAAUGAGUUCUUCCAACUGGGG


NO 254
UUUU
NO 289
ACG





SEQ ID
UGCUGGUCUUGUUUUUCAAAU
SEQ ID
AAUGAGUUCUUCCAACUGGGGA


NO 255
UUUG
NO 290
CGC





SEQ ID
GCUGGUCUUGUUUUUCAAAUU
SEQ ID
AUGAGUUCUUCCAACUGGGGAC


NO 256
UUGG
NO 291
GCC





SEQ ID
CUGGUCUUGUUUUUCAAAUUU
SEQ ID
UGAGUUCUUCCAACUGGGGACG


NO 257
UGGG
NO 292
CCU





SEQ ID
UGGUCUUGUUUUUCAAAUUUU
SEQ ID
GAGUUCUUCCAACUGGGGACGC


NO 258
GGGC
NO 293
CUC





SEQ ID
GGUCUUGUUUUUCAAAUUUUG
SEQ ID
AGUUCUUCCAACUGGGGACGCC


NO 259
GGCA
NO 294
UCU





SEQ ID
GUCUUGUUUUUCAAAUUUUGG
SEQ ID
GUUCUUCCAACUGGGGACGCCU


NO 260
GCAG
NO 295
CUG





SEQ ID
UCUUGUUUUUCAAAUUUUGGG
SEQ ID
UUCUUCCAACUGGGGACGCCUC


NO 261
CAGC
NO 296
UGU





SEQ ID
CUUGUUUUUCAAAUUUUGGGC
SEQ ID
UCUUCCAACUGGGGACGCCUCU


NO 262
AGCG
NO 297
GUU





SEQ ID
UUGUUUUUCAAAUUUUGGGCA
SEQ ID
CUUCCAACUGGGGACGCCUCUG


NO 263
GCGG
NO 298
UUC





SEQ ID
UGUUUUUCAAAUUUUGGGCAG
SEQ ID
UUCCAACUGGGGACGCCUCUGU


NO 264
CGGU
NO 299
UCC




PS236






SEQ ID
GUUUUUCAAAUUUUGGGCAGC
SEQ ID
UCCAACUGGGGACGCCUCUGUU


NO 265
GGUA
NO 300
CCA





SEQ ID
UUUUUCAAAUUUUGGGCAGCG
SEQ ID
CCAACUGGGGACGCCUCUGUUC


NO 266
GUAA
NO 301
CAA





SEQ ID
UUUUCAAAUUUUGGGCAGCGG
SEQ ID
CAACUGGGGACGCCUCUGUUCC


NO 267
UAAU
NO 302
AAA





SEQ ID
UUUCAAAUUUUGGGCAGCGGU
SEQ ID
AACUGGGGACGCCUCUGUUCCA


NO 268
AAUG
NO 303
AAU





SEQ ID
UUCAAAUUUUGGGCAGCGGUA
SEQ ID
ACUGGGGACGCCUCUGUUCCAA


NO 269
AUGA
NO 304
AUC





SEQ ID
UCAAAUUUUGGGCAGCGGUAA
SEQ ID
CUGGGGACGCCUCUGUUCCAAA


NO 270
UGAG
NO 305
UCC





SEQ ID
CAAAUUUUGGGCAGCGGUAAU
SEQ ID
UGGGGACGCCUCUGUUCCAAAU


NO 271
GAGU
NO 306
CCU





SEQ ID
AAAUUUUGGGCAGCGGUAAUG
SEQ ID
GGGGACGCCUCUGUUCCAAAUC


NO 272
AGUU
NO 307
CUG





SEQ ID
AAUUUUGGGCAGCGGUAAUGA
SEQ ID
GGGACGCCUCUGUUCCAAAUCC


NO 273
GUUC
NO 308
UGC





SEQ ID
AUUUUGGGCAGCGGUAAUGAG
SEQ ID
GGACGCCUCUGUUCCAAAUCCU


NO 274
UUCU
NO 309
GCA





SEQ ID
UUUUGGGCAGCGGUAAUGAGU
SEQ ID
GACGCCUCUGUUCCAAAUCCUG


NO 275
UCUU
NO 310
CAU





SEQ ID
UUUGGGCAGCGGUAAUGAGUU




NO 276
CUUC
















TABLE 6





OLIGONUCLEOTIDES FOR SKIPPING DMD GENE EXON 53


















SEQ ID
CUCUGGCCUGUCCUAAGACCU
SEQ ID
CAGCUUCUUCCUUAGCUUCCAG


NO 311
GCUC
NO 335
CCA





SEQ ID
UCUGGCCUGUCCUAAGACCUG
SEQ ID
AGCUUCUUCCUUAGCUUCCAGC


NO 312
CUCA
NO 336
CAU





SEQ ID
CUGGCCUGUCCUAAGACCUGC
SEQ ID
GCUUCUUCCUUAGCUUCCAGCC


NO 313
UCAG
NO 337
AUU





SEQ ID
UGGCCUGUCCUAAGACCUGCU
SEQ ID
CUUCUUCCUUAGCUUCCAGCCA


NO 314
CAGC
NO 338
UUG





SEQ ID
GGCCUGUCCUAAGACCUGCUC
SEQ ID
UUCUUCCUUAGCUUCCAGCCAU


NO 315
AGCU
NO 339
UGU





SEQ ID
GCCUGUCCUAAGACCUGCUCA
SEQ ID
UCUUCCUUAGCUUCCAGCCAUU


NO 316
GCUU
NO 340
GUG





SEQ ID
CCUGUCCUAAGACCUGCUCAG
SEQ ID
CUUCCUUAGCUUCCAGCCAUUG


NO 317
CUUC
NO 341
UGU





SEQ ID
CUGUCCUAAGACCUGCUCAGC
SEQ ID
UUCCUUAGCUUCCAGCCAUUGU


NO 318
UUCU
NO 342
GUU





SEQ ID
UGUCCUAAGACCUGCUCAGCU
SEQ ID
UCCUUAGCUUCCAGCCAUUGUG


NO 319
UCUU
NO 343
UUG





SEQ ID
GUCCUAAGACCUGCUCAGCUU
SEQ ID
CCUUAGCUUCCAGCCAUUGUGU


NO 320
CUUC
NO 344
UGA





SEQ ID
UCCUAAGACCUGCUCAGCUUC
SEQ ID
CUUAGCUUCCAGCCAUUGUGUU


NO 321
UUCC
NO 345
GAA





SEQ ID
CCUAAGACCUGCUCAGCUUCU
SEQ ID
UUAGCUUCCAGCCAUUGUGUUG


NO 322
UCCU
NO 346
AAU





SEQ ID
CUAAGACCUGCUCAGCUUCUU
SEQ ID
UAGCUUCCAGCCAUUGUGUUGA


NO 323
CCUU
NO 347
AUC





SEQ ID
UAAGACCUGCUCAGCUUCUUC
SEQ ID
AGCUUCCAGCCAUUGUGUUGAA


NO 324
CUUA
NO 348
UCC





SEQ ID
AAGACCUGCUCAGCUUCUUCC
SEQ ID
GCUUCCAGCCAUUGUGUUGAAU


NO 325
UUAG
NO 349
CCU





SEQ ID
AGACCUGCUCAGCUUCUUCCU
SEQ ID
CUUCCAGCCAUUGUGUUGAAUC


NO 326
UAGC
NO 350
CUU





SEQ ID
GACCUGCUCAGCUUCUUCCUU
SEQ ID
UUCCAGCCAUUGUGUUGAAUCC


NO 327
AGCU
NO 351
UUU





SEQ ID
ACCUGCUCAGCUUCUUCCUUA
SEQ ID
UCCAGCCAUUGUGUUGAAUCCU


NO 328
GCUU
NO 352
UUA





SEQ ID
CCUGCUCAGCUUCUUCCUUAG
SEQ ID
CCAGCCAUUGUGUUGAAUCCUU


NO 329
CUUC
NO 353
UAA





SEQ ID
CUGCUCAGCUUCUUCCUUAGC
SEQ ID
CAGCCAUUGUGUUGAAUCCUUU


NO 330
UUCC
NO 354
AAC





SEQ ID
UGCUCAGCUUCUUCCUUAGCU
SEQ ID
AGCCAUUGUGUUGAAUCCUUUA


NO 331
UCCA
NO 355
ACA





SEQ ID
GCUCAGCUUCUUCCUUAGCUU
SEQ ID
GCCAUUGUGUUGAAUCCUUUAA


NO 332
CCAG
NO 356
CAU





SEQ ID
CUCAGCUUCUUCCUUAGCUUC
SEQ ID
CCAUUGUGUUGAAUCCUUUAAC


NO 333
CAGC
NO 357
AUU





SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUUCCUUAGCUUCC
SEQ ID
CAUUGUGUUGAAUCCUUUAACA


NO 334
AGCC
NO 358
UUU
















TABLE 7





OLIGONUCLEOTIDES FOR SKIPPING OTHER EXONS OF THE DMD


GENE AS IDENTIFIED







DMD Gene Exon 6










SEQ ID
CAUUUUUGACCUACAUGUGG
SEQ ID
AUUUUUGACCUACAUGGGAAA


NO 359

NO 364
G





SEQ ID
UUUGACCUACAUGUGGAAAG
SEQ ID
UACGAGUUGAUUGUCGGACCCA


NO 360

NO 365
G





SEQ ID
UACAUUUUUGACCUACAUGUG
SEQ ID
GUGGUCUCCUUACCUAUGACUG


NO 361
GAAA G
NO 366
UGG





SEQ ID
GGUCUCCUUACCUAUGA
SEQ ID
UGUCUCAGUAAUCUUCUUACCU


NO 362

NO 367
AU





SEQ ID
UCUUACCUAUGACUAUGGAUG




NO 363
AGA












DMD Gene Exon 7










SEQ ID
UGCAUGUUCCAGUCGUUGUGU
SEQ ID
AUUUACCAACCUUCAGGAUCGA


NO 368
GG
NO 370
GUA





SEQ ID
CACUAUUCCAGUCAAAUAGGU
SEQ ID
GGCCUAAAACACAUACACAUA


NO 369
CUGG
NO 371











DMD Gene Exon 11










SEQ ID
CCCUGAGGCAUUCCCAUCUUG
SEQ ID
CUUGAAUUUAGGAGAUUCAUCU


NO 372
AAU
NO 374
G





SEQ ID
AGGACUUACUUGCUUUGUUU
SEQ ID
CAUCUUCUGAUAAUUUUCCUGU


NO 373

NO 375
U










DMD Gene Exon 17










SEQ ID
CCAUUACAGUUGUCUGUGUU
SEQ ID
UAAUCUGCCUCUUCUUUUGG


NO 376

NO 378






SEQ ID
UGACAGCCUGUGAAAUCUGUG




NO 377
AG












DMD Gene Exon 19










SEQ ID
CAGCAGUAGUUGUCAUCUGC
SEQ ID
GCCUGAGCUGAUCUGCUGGCAU


NO 379

NO 381
CUUGCA





GUU





SEQ ID
GCCUGAGCUGAUCUGCUGGCA
SEQ ID
UCUGCUGGCAUCUUGC


NO 380
UCUUGC
NO 382











DMD Gene Exon 21










SEQ ID
C
SEQ ID
CUGCAUCCAGGAACAUGGGUCC


NO 383
GCCGGUUGACUUCAUCCUGUG
NO 386






SEQ ID
GUCUGCAUCCAGGAACAUGGG
SEQ ID
GUUGAAGAUCUGAUAGCCGGUU


NO 384
UC
NO 387
GA





SEQ ID
UACUUACUGUCUGUAGCUCUU




NO 385
UCU












DMD Gene Exon 44










SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUA


NO 388

NO 413
AA





SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACU
SEQ ID
CAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUU


NO 389

NO 414
AAA





SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUA


NO390

NO 415
AA





SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGA
SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAU


NO 391

NO 416






SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
GCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUU


NO 392
A
NO 417






SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGA
SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUU


NO 393

NO 418






SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
GCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUA


NO394
A
NO 419






SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGA
SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUA


NO 395
U
NO 420






SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
GCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUAA


NO 396
AU
NO 421






SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGA
SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUA


NO 397
UU
NO 422
A





SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
GCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUAA


NO 398
AUU
NO 423
A





SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGA
SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUA


NO 399
UUA
NO 424
AA





SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
GCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUUAA


NO 400
AUA
NO 425
A





SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGA
SEQ ID
CCAUUUGUAUUUAGCAUGUUCC


NO 401
UUAA
NO 426
C





SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
AGAUACCAUUUGUAUUUAGC


NO 402
AUUAA
NO 427






SEQ ID
UCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGA
SEQ ID
GCCAUUUCUCAACAGAUCU


NO 403
UUAAA
NO 428






SEQ ID
UUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
GCCAUUUCUCAACAGAUCUGUC


NO 404
AUUAAA
NO 429
A





SEQ ID
CAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUG
SEQ ID
AUUCUCAGGAAUUUGUGUCUUU


NO 405

NO 430
C





SEQ ID
CAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAU
SEQ ID
UCUCAGGAAUUUGUGUCUUUC


NO 406

NO 431






SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUU
SEQ ID
GUUCAGCUUCUGUUAGCC


NO 407

NO 432






SEQ ID
CAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAU
SEQ ID
CUGAUUAAAUAUCUUUAUAUC


NO 408
U
NO 433






SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUU
SEQ ID
GCCGCCAUUUCUCAACAG


NO 409
A
NO 434






SEQ ID
CAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAU
SEQ ID
GUAUUUAGCAUGUUCCCA


NO 410
UA
NO 435






SEQ ID
AGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAUU
SEQ ID
CAGGAAUUUGUGUCUUUC


NO 411
AA
NO 436






SEQ ID
CAGCUUCUGUUAGCCACUGAU




NO 412
UAA












DMD Gene Exon 45










SEQ ID
UUUGCCGCUGCCCAAUGCCAU
SEQ ID
GUUGCAUUCAAUGUUCUGACAA


NO 437
CCUG
NO 470
CAG





SEQ ID
AUUCAAUGUUCUGACAACAGU
SEQ ID
UUGCAUUCAAUGUUCUGACAAC


NO 438
UUGC
NO 471
AGU





SEQ ID
CCAGUUGCAUUCAAUGUUCUG
SEQ ID
UGCAUUCAAUGUUCUGACAACA


NO 439
ACAA
NO 472
GUU





SEQ ID
CAGUUGCAUUCAAUGUUCUGA
SEQ ID
GCAUUCAAUGUUCUGACAACAG


NO 440
C
NO 473
UUU





SEQ ID
AGUUGCAUUCAAUGUUCUGA
SEQ ID
CAUUCAAUGUUCUGACAACAGU


NO 441

NO 474
UUG





SEQ ID
GAUUGCUGAAUUAUUUCUUCC
SEQ ID
AUUCAAUGUUCUGACAACAGUU


NO 442

NO 475
UGC





SEQ ID
GAUUGCUGAAUUAUUUCUUCC
SEQ ID
UCAAUGUUCUGACAACAGUUUG


NO 443
CCAG
NO 476
CCG





SEQ ID
AUUGCUGAAUUAUUUCUUCCC
SEQ ID
CAAUGUUCUGACAACAGUUUGC


NO 444
CAGU
NO 477
CGC





SEQ ID
UUGCUGAAUUAUUUCUUCCCC
SEQ ID
AAUGUUCUGACAACAGUUUGCC


NO 445
AGUU
NO 478
GCU





SEQ ID
UGCUGAAUUAUUUCUUCCCCA
SEQ ID
AUGUUCUGACAACAGUUUGCCG


NO 446
GUUG
NO 479
CUG





SEQ ID
GCUGAAUUAUUUCUUCCCCAG
SEQ ID
UGUUCUGACAACAGUUUGCCGC


NO 447
UUGC
NO 480
UGC





SEQ ID
CUGAAUUAUUUCUUCCCCAGU
SEQ ID
GUUCUGACAACAGUUUGCCGCU


NO 448
UGCA
NO 481
GCC





SEQ ID
UGAAUUAUUUCUUCCCCAGUU
SEQ ID
UUCUGACAACAGUUUGCCGCUG


NO 449
GCAU
NO 482
CCC





SEQ ID
GAAUUAUUUCUUCCCCAGUUG
SEQ ID
UCUGACAACAGUUUGCCGCUGC


NO 450
CAUU
NO 483
CCA





SEQ ID
AAUUAUUUCUUCCCCAGUUGC
SEQ ID
CUGACAACAGUUUGCCGCUGCC


NO 451
AUUC
NO 484
CAA





SEQ ID
AUUAUUUCUUCCCCAGUUGCA
SEQ ID
UGACAACAGUUUGCCGCUGCCC


NO 452
UUCA
NO 485
AAU





SEQ ID
UUAUUUCUUCCCCAGUUGCAU
SEQ ID
GACAACAGUUUGCCGCUGCCCA


NO 453
UCAA
NO 486
AUG





SEQ ID
UAUUUCUUCCCCAGUUGCAUU
SEQ ID
ACAACAGUUUGCCGCUGCCCAA


NO 454
CAAU
NO 487
UGC





SEQ ID
AUUUCUUCCCCAGUUGCAUUC
SEQ ID
CAACAGUUUGCCGCUGCCCAAU


NO 455
AAUG
NO 488
GCC





SEQ ID
UUUCUUCCCCAGUUGCAUUCA
SEQ ID
AACAGUUUGCCGCUGCCCAAUG


NO 456
AUGU
NO 489
CCA





SEQ ID
UUCUUCCCCAGUUGCAUUCAA
SEQ ID
ACAGUUUGCCGCUGCCCAAUGC


NO 457
UGUU
NO 490
CAU





SEQ ID
UCUUCCCCAGUUGCAUUCAAU
SEQ ID
CAGUUUGCCGCUGCCCAAUGCC


NO 458
GUUC
NO 491
AUC





SEQ ID
CUUCCCCAGUUGCAUUCAAUG
SEQ ID
AGUUUGCCGCUGCCCAAUGCCA


NO 459
UUCU
NO 492
UCC





SEQ ID
UUCCCCAGUUGCAUUCAAUGU
SEQ ID
GUUUGCCGCUGCCCAAUGCCAU


NO 460
UCUG
NO 493
CCU





SEQ ID
UCCCCAGUUGCAUUCAAUGUU
SEQ ID
UUUGCCGCUGCCCAAUGCCAUC


NO 461
CUGA
NO 494
CUG





SEQ ID
CCCCAGUUGCAUUCAAUGUUC
SEQ ID
UUGCCGCUGCCCAAUGCCAUCC


NO 462
UGAC
NO 495
UGG





SEQ ID
CCCAGUUGCAUUCAAUGUUCU
SEQ ID
UGCCGCUGCCCAAUGCCAUCCU


NO 463
GACA
NO 496
GGA





SEQ ID
CCAGUUGCAUUCAAUGUUCUG
SEQ ID
GCCGCUGCCCAAUGCCAUCCUG


NO 464
ACAA
NO 497
GAG





SEQ ID
CAGUUGCAUUCAAUGUUCUGA
SEQ ID
CCGCUGCCCAAUGCCAUCCUGG


NO 465
CAAC
NO 498
AGU





SEQ ID
AGUUGCAUUCAAUGUUCUGAC
SEQ ID
CGCUGCCCAAUGCCAUCCUGGA


NO 466
AACA
NO 499
GUU





SEQ ID
UCC UGU AGA AUA CUG GCA
SEQ ID
UGUUUUUGAGGAUUGCUGAA


NO 467
UC
NO 500






SEQ ID
UGCAGACCUCCUGCCACCGCAG
SEQ ID
UGUUCUGACAACAGUUUGCCGC


NO 468
AUUCA
NO 501
UGCCCA AUGCCAUCCUGG





SEQ ID
UUGCAGACCUCCUGCCACCGCA




NO 469
GAUUC





AGGCUUC












DMD Gene Exon 55










SEQ ID
CUGUUGCAGUAAUCUAUGAG
SEQ ID
UGCCAUUGUUUCAUCAGCUCUU


NO 502

NO 505
U





SEQ ID
UGCAGUAAUCUAUGAGUUUC
SEQ ID
UCCUGUAGGACAUUGGCAGU


NO 503

NO 506






SEQ ID
GAGUCUUCUAGGAGCCUU
SEQ ID
CUUGGAGUCUUCUAGGAGCC


NO 504

NO 507











DMD Gene Exon 57










SEQ ID
UAGGUGCCUGCCGGCUU
SEQ ID
CUGAACUGCUGGAAAGUCGCC


NO 508

NO 510






SEQ ID
UUCAGCUGUAGCCACACC
SEQ ID
CUGGCUUCCAAAUGGGACCUGA


NO 509

NO 511
AAAAGA





AC










DMD Gene Exon 59










SEQ ID
CAAUUUUUCCCACUCAGUAUU
SEQ ID
UCCUCAGGAGGCAGCUCUAAAU


NO 512

NO 514






SEQ ID
UUGAAGUUCCUGGAGUCUU




NO 513













DMD Gene Exon 62










SEQ ID
UGGCUCUCUCCCAGGG
SEQ ID
GGGCACUUUGUUUGGCG


NO 515

NO 517






SEQ ID
GAGAUGGCUCUCUCCCAGGGA




NO 516
CCCUGG












DMD Gene Exon 63










SEQ ID
GGUCCCAGCAAGUUGUUUG
SEQ ID
GUAGAGCUCUGUCAUUUUGGG


NO 518

NO 520






SEQ ID
UGGGAUGGUCCCAGCAAGUUG




NO 519
UUUG












DMD Gene Exon 65










SEQ ID
GCUCAAGAGAUCCACUGCAAA
SEQ ID
UCUGCAGGAUAUCCAUGGGCUG


NO 521
AAAC
NO 523
GUC





SEQ ID
GCCAUACGUACGUAUCAUAAA




NO 522
CAUUC












DMD Gene Exon 66










SEQ ID
GAUCCUCCCUGUUCGUCCCCUA




NO 524
UUAUG












DMD Gene Exon 69










SEQ ID
UGCUUUAGACUCCUGUACCUG




NO 525
AUA












DMD Gene Exon 75










SEQ ID
GGCGGCCUUUGUGUUGAC
SEQ ID
CCUUUAUGUUCGUGCUGCU


NO 526

NO 528






SEQ ID
GGACAGGCCUUUAUGUUCGUG




NO 527
CUGC








Claims
  • 1. A molecule, which binds to a continuous stretch of at least 8 nucleotides within one of the following nucleotide sequences selected from:
  • 2. A molecule according to claim 1, wherein the molecule comprises or consists of the antisense nucleotide sequence selected from SEQ ID NO: 8-358, and/or SEQ ID NO 529-535 as depicted in tables 1 to 6.
  • 3. A molecule according to claim 2, wherein the molecule comprises or consists of the antisense nucleotide sequence selected from SEQ ID NO:16, SEQ ID NO:65, SEQ ID NO:70, SEQ ID NO:91, SEQ ID NO:110, SEQ ID NO:117, SEQ ID NO:127, SEQ ID NO:165, SEQ ID NO:166, SEQ ID NO:167, SEQ ID NO:246, SEQ ID NO:299 and SEQ ID NO:357.
  • 4. A molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 2, comprising a 2′-O-alkyl phosphorothioate antisense oligonucleotide.
  • 5. A molecule according to claim 4, comprising a 2′-0 methyl phosphorothioate ribose.
  • 6. A viral-based vector, comprising an expression cassette that drives expression of a molecule as defined in any one of claims 1-5.
  • 7. A molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 5 or the viral-based vector according to claim 6 for use as a medicament, preferably for modulating splicing of the DMD pre-mRNA of a DMD or BMD patient or for the treatment of a DMD or BMD patient.
  • 8. A pharmaceutical composition comprising a molecule as defined in any one of claims 1-5 and/or the vector of claim 6, a pharmaceutical acceptable carrier, and optionally combined with a molecule which is able to induce or promote skipping of at least one of exon 6, 7, 11, 17, 19, 21, 43, 44, 45, 50-53, 55, 57, 59, 62, 63, 65, 66, 69, or 75 of the DMD pre-mRNA of a patient.
  • 9. A method for inducing and/or promoting skipping of at least one of exon 43, exon 46, exons 50-53 of the DMD pre-mRNA in a patient, preferably in an isolated cell of a patient, the method comprising providing said cell and/or said patient with a molecule as defined in any one of claims 1 to 5 or the vector of claim 6.
  • 10. A method according to claim 9, wherein an additional molecule is used which is able to induce or promote skipping of at least one of exon 6, 7, 11, 17, 19, 21, 43, 44, 45, 50-53, 55, 57, 59, 62, 63, 65, 66, 69, or 75 of the DMD pre-mRNA of a patient.
  • 11. Use of the molecule as defined in any one of claims 1-5, the vector of claim 6, or the pharmaceutical composition of claim 8 for modulating splicing of the DMD pre-mRNA or for the preparation of a medicament for the treatment of a DMD or BMD patient.
RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 17/129,117, filed Dec. 21, 2020, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/024,558, filed Jun. 29, 2018, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,876,114, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/289,053, filed Oct. 7, 2016, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/631,686, filed Feb. 25, 2015, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,499,818, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/094,571, filed Apr. 26, 2011, which is a continuation of PCT/NL2009/050113, filed Mar. 11, 2009, which is a continuation-in-part of PCT/NL2008/050673, filed Oct. 27, 2008. The disclosures of each of the above-referenced applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.

Continuations (6)
Number Date Country
Parent 17129117 Dec 2020 US
Child 18771603 US
Parent 16024558 Jun 2018 US
Child 17129117 US
Parent 15289053 Oct 2016 US
Child 16024558 US
Parent 14631686 Feb 2015 US
Child 15289053 US
Parent 13094571 Apr 2011 US
Child 14631686 US
Parent PCT/NL2009/050113 Mar 2009 WO
Child 13094571 US
Continuation in Parts (1)
Number Date Country
Parent PCT/NL2008/050673 Oct 2008 WO
Child PCT/NL2009/050113 US