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The minor gentamicin complex component, X2, is a potent premature stop codon readthrough molecule with therapeutic potential
Author(s) -
Westley J. Friesen,
Briana Johnson,
Jorge Sierra,
Zhuo Jin,
Priya Vazirani,
XiaoFeng Xue,
Yuki Tomizawa,
Ramil Baiazitov,
Christie Morrill,
Hao Ren,
Suresh Babu,
Young-Choon Moon,
Art Branstrom,
Anna Mollin,
Jean Hedrick,
Josephine Sheedy,
Gary Elfring,
Marla Weetall,
Joseph M. Colacino,
Ellen Welch,
Stuart W. Peltz
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0206158
Subject(s) - aminoglycoside , gentamicin , nephrotoxicity , biology , stop codon , nonsense mutation , in vivo , antibiotics , genetics , phenotype , gene , kidney , missense mutation
Nonsense mutations, resulting in a premature stop codon in the open reading frame of mRNAs are responsible for thousands of inherited diseases. Readthrough of premature stop codons by small molecule drugs has emerged as a promising therapeutic approach to treat disorders resulting from premature termination of translation. The aminoglycoside antibiotics are a class of molecule known to promote readthrough at premature termination codons. Gentamicin consists of a mixture of major and minor aminoglycoside components. Here, we investigated the readthrough activities of the individual components and show that each of the four major gentamicin complex components representing 92–99% of the complex each had similar potency and activity to that of the complex itself. In contrast, a minor component (gentamicin X2) was found to be the most potent and active readthrough component in the gentamicin complex. The known oto- and nephrotoxicity associated with aminoglycosides preclude long-term use as readthrough agents. Thus, we evaluated the components of the gentamicin complex as well as the so-called “designer” aminoglycoside, NB124, for in vitro and in vivo safety. In cells, we observed that gentamicin X2 had a safety/readthrough ratio (cytotoxicity/readthrough potency) superior to that of gentamicin, G418 or NB124. In rodents, we observed that gentamicin X2 showed a safety profile that was superior to G418 overall including reduced nephrotoxicity. These results support further investigation of gentamicin X2 as a therapeutic readthrough agent.

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