
The Genetics Podcast EP 216: Four decades of advancing Duchenne research with Jeffrey Chamberlain of University of Washington
This week on The Genetics Podcast, Patrick is joined by Dr. Jeffrey Chamberlain, Professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine, co-founder of Kinea Bio, and Director of the Muscular Dystrophy Cooperative Research Center of Seattle. They discuss the early breakthroughs that revealed the structure and function of the dystrophin gene, how those insights led to the creation of micro-dystrophin and systemic AAV delivery in Duchenne, and the major scientific and clinical challenges the field must now solve.
Show Notes:
0:00 Intro to The Genetics Podcast
00:59 Welcome to Jeffrey
01:33 Early discovery of the dystrophin gene and how it shaped Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) research
09:07 Efforts to map dystrophin and develop practical diagnostic techniques
12:04 How research in Jeffrey’s lab gradually led to the creation of micro-dystrophin
20:15 How micro-dystrophin and AAV delivery converged into a viable systemic gene therapy strategy
27:23 Current successes and safety challenges in systemic AAV gene therapy for neuromuscular disease
34:44 Prospects and limitations of gene editing for Duchenne and emerging alternatives to AAV micro-dystrophin
44:57 Closing remarks
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