Therapeutic application of circular RNA aptamers in a mouse model of psoriasis.
Si-Kun GuoChu-Xiao LiuYi-Feng XuXiao WangFang NanYoukui HuangSiqi LiShan NanLing LiEdo KonChen LiMeng-Yuan WeiRina SuJia WeiShiguang PengNitay Ad-ElJiaquan LiuDan PeerTing ChenLi YangLing-Ling ChenPublished in: Nature biotechnology (2024)
Efforts to advance RNA aptamers as a new therapeutic modality have been limited by their susceptibility to degradation and immunogenicity. In a previous study, we demonstrated synthesized short double-stranded region-containing circular RNAs (ds-cRNAs) with minimal immunogenicity targeted to dsRNA-activated protein kinase R (PKR). Here we test the therapeutic potential of ds-cRNAs in a mouse model of imiquimod-induced psoriasis. We find that genetic supplementation of ds-cRNAs leads to inhibition of PKR, resulting in alleviation of downstream interferon-α and dsRNA signals and attenuation of psoriasis phenotypes. Delivery of ds-cRNAs by lipid nanoparticles to the spleen attenuates PKR activity in examined splenocytes, resulting in reduced epidermal thickness. These findings suggest that ds-cRNAs represent a promising approach to mitigate excessive PKR activation for therapeutic purposes.