Targeting CAG repeat RNAs reduces Huntington's disease phenotype independently of huntingtin levels

Author

Rué Cabré, Laura

Bañez-Coronel, Mónica

Creus Muncunill, Jordi

Giralt Torroella, Albert

Alcalá Vida, Rafael

Mentxaka, Gartze

Kagerbauer, Birgit

Zomeño Abellán, M. Teresa

Aranda, Zeus

Venturi, Verónica

Pérez Navarro, Esther

Estivill, Xavier, 1955-

Martí Puig, Eulàlia

Publication date

2017-06-06T15:03:25Z

2017-06-06T15:03:25Z

2016-11-01

2017-06-06T15:03:25Z

Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is a polyglutamine disorder caused by a CAG expansion in the Huntingtin (HTT) gene exon 1. This expansion encodes a mutant protein whose abnormal function is traditionally associated with HD pathogenesis; however, recent evidence has also linked HD pathogenesis to RNA stable hairpins formed by the mutant HTT expansion. Here, we have shown that a locked nucleic acid-modified antisense oligonucleotide complementary to the CAG repeat (LNA-CTG) preferentially binds to mutant HTT without affecting HTT mRNA or protein levels. LNA-CTGs produced rapid and sustained improvement of motor deficits in an R6/2 mouse HD model that was paralleled by persistent binding of LNA-CTG to the expanded HTT exon 1 transgene. Motor improvement was accompanied by a pronounced recovery in the levels of several striatal neuronal markers severely impaired in R6/2 mice. Furthermore, in R6/2 mice, LNA-CTG blocked several pathogenic mechanisms caused by expanded CAG RNA, including small RNA toxicity and decreased Rn45s expression levels. These results suggest that LNA-CTGs promote neuroprotection by blocking the detrimental activity of CAG repeats within HTT mRNA. The present data emphasize the relevance of expanded CAG RNA to HD pathogenesis, indicate that inhibition of HTT expression is not required to reverse motor deficits, and further suggest a therapeutic potential for LNA-CTG in polyglutamine disorders.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Corea de Huntington; Malalties neurodegeneratives; RNA; Huntington's chorea; Neurodegenerative Diseases; RNA

Publisher

American Society for Clinical Investigation

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI83185

Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2016, vol. 126, num. 11, p. 4319-4330

https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI83185

Rights

(c) American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2016