A framework for individualized splice-switching oligonucleotide therapy

Jin‐Kuk Kim(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Sijae Woo(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Claudio M. de Gusmão(Boston Children's Hospital), Boxun Zhao(Broad Institute), Diana Chin(Boston Children's Hospital), Renata L. DiDonato(Boston Children's Hospital), Minh Anh Nguyen(Boston Children's Hospital), Tojo Nakayama(Boston Children's Hospital), Chunguang April Hu(Boston Children's Hospital), Aubrie Soucy(Boston Children's Hospital), Ashley Kuniholm(Boston Children's Hospital), Jennifer Karlin Thornton, Olivia Riccardi(Boston Children's Hospital), Danielle A. Friedman(Boston Children's Hospital), Christelle Moufawad El Achkar(Boston Children's Hospital), Zane S. Dash(Boston Children's Hospital), Laura Cornelissen(Boston Children's Hospital), Carolina Donado(Boston Children's Hospital), Kamli N. W. Faour(Boston Children's Hospital), Lynn Wein Bush(Boston Children's Hospital), Victoria Suslovitch(Boston Children's Hospital), Claudia Lentucci(Boston Children's Hospital), Peter J. Park(Harvard University), Eunjung Alice Lee(Broad Institute), Al Patterson(Boston Children's Hospital), Anthony Philippakis(Broad Institute), Brad Margus, Charles B. Berde(Boston Children's Hospital), Timothy W. Yu(Broad Institute)
Nature
July 12, 2023
Cited by 150Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Splice-switching antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) could be used to treat a subset of individuals with genetic diseases 1 , but the systematic identification of such individuals remains a challenge. Here we performed whole-genome sequencing analyses to characterize genetic variation in 235 individuals (from 209 families) with ataxia-telangiectasia, a severely debilitating and life-threatening recessive genetic disorder 2,3 , yielding a complete molecular diagnosis in almost all individuals. We developed a predictive taxonomy to assess the amenability of each individual to splice-switching ASO intervention; 9% and 6% of the individuals had variants that were ‘probably’ or ‘possibly’ amenable to ASO splice modulation, respectively. Most amenable variants were in deep intronic regions that are inaccessible to exon-targeted sequencing. We developed ASOs that successfully rescued mis-splicing and ATM cellular signalling in patient fibroblasts for two recurrent variants. In a pilot clinical study, one of these ASOs was used to treat a child who had been diagnosed with ataxia-telangiectasia soon after birth, and showed good tolerability without serious adverse events for three years. Our study provides a framework for the prospective identification of individuals with genetic diseases who might benefit from a therapeutic approach involving splice-switching ASOs.


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