Invited review: Myoblast transfer: A possible therapy for inherited myopathies?
- 1 March 1991
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Muscle & Nerve
- Vol. 14 (3) , 197-212
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mus.880140302
Abstract
A potential therapeutic strategy for genetic diseases is to alter the genetic constitution of the affected tissues by means of grafts of normal precursor or stem cells. Over several years, evidence has accumulated to suggest that primary diseases of skeletal muscle, such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy, may be susceptible to this approach. This review makes a critical examination of such background evidence, and also of more recent data directly addressing the concept of therapy by means of grafts of normal myogenic cells. It is concluded that the data establish the principle that such grafts effect an alteration of the genetic constitution and phenotype of skeletal muscle and, therefore, might be used to alleviate recessively inherited myopathies. Several obstacles to the therapeutic application of this method to human disease are also identified; these seem to be problems of a technical nature rather than of basic principle, and none appears insuperable.Keywords
This publication has 96 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adrenocorticotropin is a specific mitogen for mammalian myogenic cellsDevelopmental Biology, 1989
- Mosaic Expression of Dystrophin in Symptomatic Carriers of Duchenne's Muscular DystrophyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Absence of exogenous satellite cell contribution to regeneration of frozen skeletal muscleJournal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility, 1986
- A satellite cell mitogen from crushed adult muscleDevelopmental Biology, 1986
- Direct enzyme transfer from lymphocytes corrects a lysosomal storage diseaseBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1985
- The nuclear-cytoplasmic relationship in ‘mosaic‘ skeletal muscle fibers from mouse chimaerasExperimental Cell Research, 1983
- Cell lineage analysis of cerebellar Purkinje cells in mouse chimerasDevelopmental Biology, 1981
- Chimaera mouse study shows absence of disease in genetically dystrophic muscleNature, 1974
- Muscular dystrophy in the mouse caused by an allele at the -locusLife Sciences, 1970
- Regeneration of mature skeletal muscleThe Anatomical Record, 1957