The highly prevalent metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) is associated with liver steatosis, inflammation and hepatocyte injury that can lead to fibrosis and may progress to hepatocellular carcinoma and death. New treatment modalities such as gene therapy may be transformative for MASH patients. Here, we describe that one-time intramuscular administration of adeno-associated viral vectors of serotype 1 (AAV1) encoding native fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21), a key metabolic regulator, resulted in sustained increased circulating levels of the factor, which mediated long-term (>1 year) MASH and hepatic fibrosis reversion and halted development of liver tumors in obese male and female mouse models. AAV1-FGF21 treatment also counteracted obesity, adiposity, and insulin resistance, which are significant drivers of MASH. Scale-up to large animals successfully resulted in safe skeletal muscle biodistribution and biological activity in key metabolic tissues. Moreover, as a step towards the clinic, circulating FGF21 levels were characterized in obese, insulin resistant and MASH patients. Overall, these results underscore the potential of the muscle-directed AAV1-FGF21 gene therapy to treat MASH and support its clinical translation.
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