DNAzyme Cleavage of CAG Repeat RNA in Polyglutamine Diseases

被引:0
|
作者
Nan Zhang
Brittani Bewick
Jason Schultz
Anjana Tiwari
Robert Krencik
Aijun Zhang
Kaho Adachi
Guangbin Xia
Kyuson Yun
Partha Sarkar
Tetsuo Ashizawa
机构
[1] Neuroscience Program,Department of Neurology
[2] Houston Methodist Research Institute,Center for Neuroregeneration, Department of Neurosurgery
[3] Houston Methodist Research Institute,Center for Bioenergetics, Department of Neurosurgery
[4] Houston Methodist Research Institute,Department of Molecular and Cell Biology
[5] UC-Berkeley,Department of Neurology and Department of Neuroscience, Cell Biology and Anatomy
[6] Indiana University School of Medicine-Fort Wayne,undefined
[7] UTMB Health,undefined
来源
Neurotherapeutics | 2021年 / 18卷
关键词
DNAzyme; Polyglutamine; CAG repeats; Huntington’s disease; Spinocerebellar ataxia; Microsatellite expansion;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
CAG repeat expansion is the genetic cause of nine incurable polyglutamine (polyQ) diseases with neurodegenerative features. Silencing repeat RNA holds great therapeutic value. Here, we developed a repeat-based RNA-cleaving DNAzyme that catalyzes the destruction of expanded CAG repeat RNA of six polyQ diseases with high potency. DNAzyme preferentially cleaved the expanded allele in spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1) cells. While cleavage was non-allele-specific for spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3) cells, treatment of DNAzyme leads to improved cell viability without affecting mitochondrial metabolism or p62-dependent aggresome formation. DNAzyme appears to be stable in mouse brain for at least 1 month, and an intermediate dosage of DNAzyme in a SCA3 mouse model leads to a significant reduction of high molecular weight ATXN3 proteins. Our data suggest that DNAzyme is an effective RNA silencing molecule for potential treatment of multiple polyQ diseases.
引用
收藏
页码:1710 / 1728
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Potential Transfer of Polyglutamine and CAG-Repeat RNA in Extracellular Vesicles in Huntington's Disease: Background and Evaluation in Cell Culture
    Zhang, Xuan
    Abels, Erik R.
    Redzic, Jasmina S.
    Margulis, Julia
    Finkbeiner, Steve
    Breakefield, Xandra O.
    CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR NEUROBIOLOGY, 2016, 36 (03) : 459 - 470
  • [22] Transgenic mice in the study of polyglutamine repeat expansion diseases
    Bates, GP
    Mangiarini, L
    Davies, SW
    BRAIN PATHOLOGY, 1998, 8 (04) : 699 - 714
  • [23] Pathologic polyglutamine-protein interactions as a therapeutic target in polyglutamine repeat diseases.
    Burke, J
    BRAIN PATHOLOGY, 2000, 10 (04) : 712 - 712
  • [24] Expanded polyglutamine stretches associated with CAG repeat diseases interact with TAFII130, interfering with CREB-dependent transcription.
    Shimohata, T
    Nakajima, T
    Yamada, M
    Uchida, C
    Onodera, O
    Naruse, S
    Sato, T
    Kimura, T
    Nozaki, K
    Sano, Y
    Sato, A
    Oyake, M
    Tanese, N
    Takahashi, H
    Tsuji, S
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2000, 67 (04) : 375 - 375
  • [25] Atomic resolution structure of CAG RNA repeats: structural insights and implications for the trinucleotide repeat expansion diseases
    Kiliszek, Agnieszka
    Kierzek, Ryszard
    Krzyzosiak, Wlodzimierz J.
    Rypniewski, Wojciech
    NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2010, 38 (22) : 8370 - 8376
  • [26] Method to introduce stable, expanded, polyglutamine-encoding CAG/CAA trinucleotide repeats into CAG repeat-containing genes
    Michalik, A
    Kazantsev, A
    Van Broeckhoven, C
    BIOTECHNIQUES, 2001, 31 (02) : 250 - +
  • [27] Instantaneous Iodine-Assisted DNAzyme Cleavage of Phosphorothioate RNA
    Huang, Po-Jung Jimmy
    Moon, Woohyun J.
    Liu, Juewen
    BIOCHEMISTRY, 2019, 58 (05) : 422 - 429
  • [28] Conformational modulation mediated by polyglutamine expansion in CAG repeat expansion disease-associated proteins
    Verani, Margherita
    Bustamante, Maria
    Martufi, Paola
    Daldin, Manuel
    Cariulo, Cristina
    Azzollini, Lucia
    Fodale, Valentina
    Puglisi, Francesca
    Weiss, Andreas
    Macdonald, Douglas
    Petricca, Lara
    Caricasole, Andrea
    BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2016, 478 (02) : 949 - 955
  • [29] Mechanisms of RNA-induced toxicity in CAG repeat disorders
    Nalavade, R.
    Griesche, N.
    Ryan, D. P.
    Hildebrand, S.
    Krauss, S.
    CELL DEATH & DISEASE, 2013, 4 : e752 - e752
  • [30] Involvement of polyglutamine endolysis followed by pyroglutamate formation in the pathogenesis of triplet repeat/polyglutamine-expansion diseases
    Saido, TC
    MEDICAL HYPOTHESES, 2000, 54 (03) : 427 - 429