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RNA Interference Effectors Selectively Silence the Pathogenic Variant GNAO1 c.607 G > A In Vitro .

Natalia V KlementievaEvgenii A LunevAnna A ShmidtElizaveta M LosevaIrina M SavchenkoEkaterina A SvetlovaIvan I GalkinAnna V PolikarpovaEvgeny V UsachevSvetlana G VassilievaValeria I MarinaMarina A DzhenkovaAnna D RomanovaAnton V AgutinAnna A TimakovaDenis A ReshetovTatiana V EgorovaMaryana V Bardina
Published in: Nucleic acid therapeutics (2024)
RNA interference (RNAi)-based therapeutics hold the potential for dominant genetic disorders, enabling sequence-specific inhibition of pathogenic gene products. We aimed to direct RNAi for the selective suppression of the heterozygous GNAO1 c.607 G > A variant causing GNAO1 encephalopathy. By screening short interfering RNA (siRNA), we showed that GNAO1 c.607G>A is a druggable target for RNAi. The si1488 candidate achieved at least twofold allelic discrimination and downregulated mutant protein to 35%. We created vectorized RNAi by incorporating the si1488 sequence into the short hairpin RNA (shRNA) in the adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector. The shRNA stem and loop were modified to improve the transcription, processing, and guide strand selection. All tested shRNA constructs demonstrated selectivity toward mutant GNAO1 , while tweaking hairpin structure only marginally affected the silencing efficiency. The selectivity of shRNA-mediated silencing was confirmed in the context of AAV vector transduction. To conclude, RNAi effectors ranging from siRNA to AAV-RNAi achieve suppression of the pathogenic GNAO1 c.607G>A and discriminate alleles by the single-nucleotide substitution. For gene therapy development, it is crucial to demonstrate the benefit of these RNAi effectors in patient-specific neurons and animal models of the GNAO1 encephalopathy.
Keyphrases
  • gene therapy
  • early onset
  • transcription factor
  • cancer therapy
  • spinal cord
  • copy number
  • nucleic acid
  • small molecule
  • type iii
  • dna methylation
  • risk assessment