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Grant - Winter 2019 - DMD - Diego Fraidenraich, PhD

"A combination of pharmacological treatment that involves Cx43 peptide mimetics and gene editing in phosphorylation sites may synergistically increase the chances of a cure."
Diego Fraidenraich, PhD, assistant professor of Cell Biology and Molecular Medicine at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, was awarded an MDA research grant totaling $300,000 over three years to study the relationship between the connexin 43 protein (Cx43) and cardiomyopathy in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) mice models.
Patients with DMD typically have cardiac complications, and heart failure is the major cause of death in DMD. Dr. Fraidenraich previously found connexin 43, a type of neuromuscular gap junction protein, to be expressed more in the DMD mouse heart, and that removal or inhibition of Cx43 protein could protect stressed DMD mice from arrhythmia, cardiomyopathy, and premature death.
To further investigate Cx43 as an important target for the treatment of DMD cardiomyopathy, Dr. Fraidenraich will use this grant to further characterize the role of Cx43 in mice and in human tissue by examining phosphorylation, expression levels, and effects on cardiac pathology and function. His previous research used engineered mice with a mutant version of Cx43 that mimicked full phosphorylation; in this project he will extend these studies to a more severe mouse model of DMD.
https://doi.org/10.55762/pc.gr.84546
Grantee: DMD - Diego Fraidenraich, PhD
Grant type: Research Grant
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