Variant-selective stereopure oligonucleotides protect against pathologies associated with C9orf72-repeat expansion in preclinical models

Yuanjing Liu(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Jean‐Cosme Dodart(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Hélène Tran(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Shaunna S. Berkovitch(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Maurine Braun(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Michael Byrne(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Ann Durbin(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Xiao Hu(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Naoki Iwamoto(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Hyun Gyung Jang(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Kandasamy Pachamuthu(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Fangjun Liu(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Kenneth Longo(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Jörg Ruschel(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Juili Dilip Shelke(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Hailin Yang(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Yuan Yin(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Amy Donner(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Zhong Zhong(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Chandra Vargeese(Wave Life Sciences (United States)), Robert H. Brown(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School)
Nature Communications
February 8, 2021
Cited by 85Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

-repeat expansion in C9orf72 is the most common genetic cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Neuronal degeneration associated with this expansion arises from a loss of C9orf72 protein, the accumulation of RNA foci, the expression of dipeptide repeat (DPR) proteins, or all these factors. We report the discovery of a new targeting sequence that is common to all C9orf72 transcripts but enables preferential knockdown of repeat-containing transcripts in multiple cellular models and C9BAC transgenic mice. We optimize stereopure oligonucleotides that act through this site, and we demonstrate that their preferential activity depends on both backbone stereochemistry and asymmetric wing design. In mice, stereopure oligonucleotides produce durable depletion of pathogenic signatures without disrupting protein expression. These oligonucleotides selectively protect motor neurons harboring C9orf72-expansion mutation from glutamate-induced toxicity. We hypothesize that targeting C9orf72 with stereopure oligonucleotides may be a viable therapeutic approach for the treatment of C9orf72-associated neurodegenerative disorders.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis