AI Article Synopsis

  • Allele-specific silencing by RNA interference (ASP-siRNA) is a potential treatment that targets specific mutant genes without significantly affecting the healthy versions.
  • This method could be especially useful for conditions caused by gene duplications, like autosomal dominant adult-onset demyelinating leukodystrophy (ADLD) caused by lamin B1 (LMNB1) duplication.
  • In experiments, effective ASP-siRNAs were identified, which improved gene and protein levels and alleviated disease symptoms in ADLD patient-derived cells and relevant cellular models, suggesting ASP-siRNA as a viable therapeutic approach for this and similar genetic disorders.

Article Abstract

Allele-specific silencing by RNA interference (ASP-siRNA) holds promise as a therapeutic strategy for downregulating a single mutant allele with minimal suppression of the corresponding wild-type allele. This approach has been effectively used to target autosomal dominant mutations and single nucleotide polymorphisms linked with aberrantly expanded trinucleotide repeats. Here, we propose ASP-siRNA as a preferable choice to target duplicated disease genes, avoiding potentially harmful excessive downregulation. As a proof-of-concept, we studied autosomal dominant adult-onset demyelinating leukodystrophy (ADLD) due to lamin B1 (LMNB1) duplication, a hereditary, progressive and fatal disorder affecting myelin in the CNS. Using a reporter system, we screened the most efficient ASP-siRNAs preferentially targeting one of the alleles at rs1051644 (average minor allele frequency: 0.45) located in the 3' untranslated region of the gene. We identified four siRNAs with a high efficacy and allele-specificity, which were tested in ADLD patient-derived fibroblasts. Three of the small interfering RNAs were highly selective for the target allele and restored both LMNB1 mRNA and protein levels close to control levels. Furthermore, small interfering RNA treatment abrogates the ADLD-specific phenotypes in fibroblasts and in two disease-relevant cellular models: murine oligodendrocytes overexpressing human LMNB1, and neurons directly reprogrammed from patients' fibroblasts. In conclusion, we demonstrated that ASP-silencing by RNA interference is a suitable and promising therapeutic option for ADLD. Moreover, our results have a broad translational value extending to several pathological conditions linked to gene-gain in copy number variations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awz139DOI Listing

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