Therapeutic silencing of mutant huntingtin with siRNA attenuates striatal and cortical neuropathology and behavioral deficits

Marian DiFiglia(Massachusetts General Hospital), Miguel Sena‐Esteves(Massachusetts General Hospital), Kathryn Chase, Ellen Sapp(Massachusetts General Hospital), E. Pfister, Magdolna Sass, Jeffrey A. Yoder(Massachusetts General Hospital), Patrick Reeves(Massachusetts General Hospital), Raj Kumar Pandey(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Muthiah Manoharan(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Dinah W.Y. Sah(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Phillip D. Zamore(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Neil Aronin
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 16, 2007
Cited by 410Open Access
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Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by expansion of a CAG repeat in the huntingtin (Htt) gene. HD is autosomal dominant and, in theory, amenable to therapeutic RNA silencing. We introduced cholesterol-conjugated small interfering RNA duplexes (cc-siRNA) targeting human Htt mRNA (siRNA-Htt) into mouse striata that also received adeno-associated virus containing either expanded (100 CAG) or wild-type (18 CAG) Htt cDNA encoding huntingtin (Htt) 1-400. Adeno-associated virus delivery to striatum and overlying cortex of the mutant Htt gene, but not the wild type, produced neuropathology and motor deficits. Treatment with cc-siRNA-Htt in mice with mutant Htt prolonged survival of striatal neurons, reduced neuropil aggregates, diminished inclusion size, and lowered the frequency of clasping and footslips on balance beam. cc-siRNA-Htt was designed to target human wild-type and mutant Htt and decreased levels of both in the striatum. Our findings indicate that a single administration into the adult striatum of an siRNA targeting Htt can silence mutant Htt, attenuate neuronal pathology, and delay the abnormal behavioral phenotype observed in a rapid-onset, viral transgenic mouse model of HD.


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