Targeted degradation of sense and antisense <i>C9orf72</i> RNA foci as therapy for ALS and frontotemporal degeneration

Clotilde Lagier‐Tourenne(University of California San Diego), Michael W. Baughn, Frank Rigo(Ionis Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Shuying Sun(University of California San Diego), Patrick Liu, Hairi Li, Jie Jiang(University of California San Diego), Andrew T. Watt(Ionis Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Seung Chun(Ionis Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Melanie Katz(Ionis Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Jinsong Qiu, Ying Sun(University of California San Diego), Shuo‐Chien Ling(University of California San Diego), Qiang Zhu(University of California San Diego), Magdalini Polymenidou(University of California San Diego), Kevin Drenner(University of California San Diego), Jonathan W. Artates(University of California San Diego), Melissa McAlonis‐Downes(University of California San Diego), Sebastian Markmiller, Kasey R. Hutt, Donald Pizzo, Janet Cady(Washington University in St. Louis), Matthew B. Harms(Washington University in St. Louis), Robert H. Baloh(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Scott R. VandenBerg, G Yeo, Xiang‐Dong Fu, C. Frank Bennett(Ionis Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Don W. Cleveland(University of California San Diego), John Ravits
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 29, 2013
Cited by 556Open Access
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Abstract

Expanded hexanucleotide repeats in the chromosome 9 open reading frame 72 (C9orf72) gene are the most common genetic cause of ALS and frontotemporal degeneration (FTD). Here, we identify nuclear RNA foci containing the hexanucleotide expansion (GGGGCC) in patient cells, including white blood cells, fibroblasts, glia, and multiple neuronal cell types (spinal motor, cortical, hippocampal, and cerebellar neurons). RNA foci are not present in sporadic ALS, familial ALS/FTD caused by other mutations (SOD1, TDP-43, or tau), Parkinson disease, or nonneurological controls. Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) are identified that reduce GGGGCC-containing nuclear foci without altering overall C9orf72 RNA levels. By contrast, siRNAs fail to reduce nuclear RNA foci despite marked reduction in overall C9orf72 RNAs. Sustained ASO-mediated lowering of C9orf72 RNAs throughout the CNS of mice is demonstrated to be well tolerated, producing no behavioral or pathological features characteristic of ALS/FTD and only limited RNA expression alterations. Genome-wide RNA profiling identifies an RNA signature in fibroblasts from patients with C9orf72 expansion. ASOs targeting sense strand repeat-containing RNAs do not correct this signature, a failure that may be explained, at least in part, by discovery of abundant RNA foci with C9orf72 repeats transcribed in the antisense (GGCCCC) direction, which are not affected by sense strand-targeting ASOs. Taken together, these findings support a therapeutic approach by ASO administration to reduce hexanucleotide repeat-containing RNAs and raise the potential importance of targeting expanded RNAs transcribed in both directions.


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