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Design, Characterization, and Lead Selection of Therapeutic miRNAs Targeting Huntingtin for Development of Gene Therapy for Huntington's Disease
Author(s) -
Jana Miniarikova,
Ilaria Zanella,
Angelina Huseinovic,
Tom van der Zon,
Evelyn S. Hanemaaijer,
Raygene Martier,
Annemart Koornneef,
Amber L. Southwell,
Michael R. Hayden,
S J van Deventer,
Harald Petry,
Pavlina Konstantinova
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
molecular therapy — nucleic acids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.208
H-Index - 59
ISSN - 2162-2531
DOI - 10.1038/mtna.2016.7
Subject(s) - huntingtin , gene silencing , gene knockdown , exon , huntington's disease , biology , exon skipping , microrna , rna interference , transgene , genetics , gene , microbiology and biotechnology , rna , mutant , medicine , alternative splicing , disease , pathology
Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by accumulation of CAG expansions in the huntingtin ( HTT ) gene. Hence, decreasing the expression of mutated HTT (mtHTT) is the most upstream approach for treatment of HD. We have developed HTT gene-silencing approaches based on expression cassette-optimized artificial miRNAs (miHTTs). In the first approach, total silencing of wild-type and mtHTT was achieved by targeting exon 1. In the second approach, allele-specific silencing was induced by targeting the heterozygous single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs362331 in exon 50 or rs362307 in exon 67 linked to mtHTT. The miHTT expression cassette was optimized by embedding anti-HTT target sequences in ten pri-miRNA scaffolds and their HTT knockdown efficacy, allele selectivity, passenger strand activity, and processing patterns were analyzed in vitro. Furthermore, three scaffolds expressing miH12 targeting exon 1 were incorporated in an adeno-associated viral serotype 5 (AAV5) vector and their HTT knock-down efficiency and pre-miHTT processing were compared in the humanized transgenic Hu128/21 HD mouse model. Our data demonstrate strong allele-selective silencing of mtHTT by miSNP50 targeting rs362331 and total HTT silencing by miH12 both in vitro and in vivo . Ultimately, we show that HTT knock-down efficiency and guide strand processing can be enhanced by using different cellular pri-miRNA scaffolds.

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