scholarly journals Splicing Mutations Impairing CDKL5 Expression and Activity Can be Efficiently Rescued by U1snRNA-Based Therapy

2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (17) ◽  
pp. 4130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dario Balestra ◽  
Domenico Giorgio ◽  
Matteo Bizzotto ◽  
Maria Fazzari ◽  
Bruria Ben Zeev ◽  
...  

Mutations in the CDKL5 gene lead to an incurable rare neurological condition characterized by the onset of seizures in the first weeks of life and severe intellectual disability. Replacement gene or protein therapies could represent intriguing options, however, their application may be inhibited by the recent demonstration that CDKL5 is dosage sensitive. Conversely, correction approaches acting on pre-mRNA splicing would preserve CDKL5 physiological regulation. Since ~15% of CDKL5 pathogenic mutations are candidates to affect splicing, we evaluated the capability of variants of the spliceosomal U1 small nuclear RNA (U1snRNA) to correct mutations affecting +1 and +5 nucleotides at the 5′ donor splice site and predicted to cause exon skipping. Our results show that CDKL5 minigene variants expressed in mammalian cells are a valid approach to assess CDKL5 splicing pattern. The expression of engineered U1snRNA effectively rescued mutations at +5 but not at the +1 nucleotides. Importantly, we proved that U1snRNA-mediated splicing correction fully restores CDKL5 protein synthesis, subcellular distribution and kinase activity. Eventually, by correcting aberrant splicing of an exogenously expressed splicing-competent CDKL5 transgene, we provided insights on the morphological rescue of CDKL5 null neurons, reporting the first proof-of-concept of the therapeutic value of U1snRNA-mediated CDKL5 splicing correction.

1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 2666-2676 ◽  
Author(s):  
J B Cohen ◽  
S D Broz ◽  
A D Levinson

Pre-mRNA 5' splice site activity depends, at least in part, on base complementarity to U1 small nuclear RNA. In transient coexpression assays, defective 5' splice sites can regain activity in the presence of U1 carrying compensatory changes, but it is unclear whether such mutant U1 RNAs can be permanently expressed in mammalian cells. We have explored this issue to determine whether U1 small nuclear RNAs with altered specificity may be of value to rescue targeted mutant genes or alter pre-mRNA processing profiles. This effort was initiated following our observation that U1 with specificity for a splice site associated with an alternative H-ras exon substantially reduced the synthesis of the potentially oncogenic p21ras protein in transient assays. We describe the development of a mammalian complementation system that selects for removal of a splicing-defective intron placed within a drug resistance gene. Complementation was observed in proportion to the degree of complementarity between transfected mutant U1 genes and different defective splice sites, and all cells selected in this manner were found to express mutant U1 RNA. In addition, these cells showed specific activation of defective splice sites presented by an unlinked reporter gene. We discuss the prospects of this approach to permanently alter the expression of targeted genes in mammalian cells.


1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (12) ◽  
pp. 2151-2155 ◽  
Author(s):  
G L Eliceiri ◽  
J H Smith

It was demonstrated previously that the synthesis of small nuclear RNA (snRNA) species U1 and U2 in human cells is very sensitive to UV radiation. In the present work, the UV sensitivity of U3, U4, and U5 snRNA synthesis is shown to be also high. The synthesis of U1, U2, U3, U4, and U5 snRNAs progressively decreased during the first 2 h after UV irradiation (this was not observed in polyadenylated RNA) and had not returned to normal rates 6 h after UV exposure. In contrast, the restoration of 5.8S rRNA synthesis began immediately after UV irradiation and was essentially complete 6 h later. A small fraction of U1 and U5 (and possibly U2 and U3) snRNA synthesis remained unaffected by high UV doses, when cell radiolabeling began 10 min after UV irradiation. The present data suggest that a factor other than the level of pyrimidine dimers in DNA (possibly, steps in the post-irradiation DNA repair process) plays an important role in the mechanism of UV-induced inhibition of U1-U5 snRNA synthesis.


1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 2666-2676
Author(s):  
J B Cohen ◽  
S D Broz ◽  
A D Levinson

Pre-mRNA 5' splice site activity depends, at least in part, on base complementarity to U1 small nuclear RNA. In transient coexpression assays, defective 5' splice sites can regain activity in the presence of U1 carrying compensatory changes, but it is unclear whether such mutant U1 RNAs can be permanently expressed in mammalian cells. We have explored this issue to determine whether U1 small nuclear RNAs with altered specificity may be of value to rescue targeted mutant genes or alter pre-mRNA processing profiles. This effort was initiated following our observation that U1 with specificity for a splice site associated with an alternative H-ras exon substantially reduced the synthesis of the potentially oncogenic p21ras protein in transient assays. We describe the development of a mammalian complementation system that selects for removal of a splicing-defective intron placed within a drug resistance gene. Complementation was observed in proportion to the degree of complementarity between transfected mutant U1 genes and different defective splice sites, and all cells selected in this manner were found to express mutant U1 RNA. In addition, these cells showed specific activation of defective splice sites presented by an unlinked reporter gene. We discuss the prospects of this approach to permanently alter the expression of targeted genes in mammalian cells.


1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (12) ◽  
pp. 2151-2155
Author(s):  
G L Eliceiri ◽  
J H Smith

It was demonstrated previously that the synthesis of small nuclear RNA (snRNA) species U1 and U2 in human cells is very sensitive to UV radiation. In the present work, the UV sensitivity of U3, U4, and U5 snRNA synthesis is shown to be also high. The synthesis of U1, U2, U3, U4, and U5 snRNAs progressively decreased during the first 2 h after UV irradiation (this was not observed in polyadenylated RNA) and had not returned to normal rates 6 h after UV exposure. In contrast, the restoration of 5.8S rRNA synthesis began immediately after UV irradiation and was essentially complete 6 h later. A small fraction of U1 and U5 (and possibly U2 and U3) snRNA synthesis remained unaffected by high UV doses, when cell radiolabeling began 10 min after UV irradiation. The present data suggest that a factor other than the level of pyrimidine dimers in DNA (possibly, steps in the post-irradiation DNA repair process) plays an important role in the mechanism of UV-induced inhibition of U1-U5 snRNA synthesis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (7) ◽  
pp. 3784
Author(s):  
Véronique Noé ◽  
Carlos J. Ciudad

Therapeutic strategies for rare diseases based on exon skipping are aimed at mediating the elimination of mutated exons and restoring the reading frame of the affected protein. We explored the capability of polypurine reverse-Hoogsteen hairpins (PPRHs) to cause exon skipping in NB6 cells carrying a duplication of exon 2 of the DHFR gene that causes a frameshift abolishing DHFR activity. Methods: Different editing PPRHs were designed and transfected in NB6 cells followed by incubation in a DHFR-selective medium lacking hypoxanthine and thymidine. Surviving colonies were analyzed by DNA sequencing, RT-PCR, Western blotting and DHFR enzymatic activity. Results: Transfection of editing PPRHs originated colonies in the DHFR-selective medium. DNA sequencing results proved that the DHFR sequence in all these colonies corresponded to the wildtype sequence with just one copy of exon 2. In the edited colonies, the skipping of the additional exon was confirmed at the mRNA level, the DHFR protein was restored, and it showed high levels of DHFR activity. Conclusions: Editing-PPRHs are able to cause exon skipping at the DNA level and could be applied as a possible therapeutic tool for rare diseases.


Tumor Biology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 2809-2814 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farid Keramati ◽  
Ehsan Seyedjafari ◽  
Parviz Fallah ◽  
Masoud Soleimani ◽  
Hossein Ghanbarian

1991 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 340S-340S
Author(s):  
YUNQIAN HU ◽  
JOHN W. S. BROWN ◽  
ROBBIE WAUGH ◽  
PHILIP C. TURNER

1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 6337-6349 ◽  
Author(s):  
S E Wells ◽  
M Ares

Binding of U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) to the pre-mRNA is an early and important step in spliceosome assembly. We searched for evidence of cooperative function between yeast U2 small nuclear RNA (snRNA) and several genetically identified splicing (Prp) proteins required for the first chemical step of splicing, using the phenotype of synthetic lethality. We constructed yeast strains with pairwise combinations of 28 different U2 alleles with 10 prp mutations and found lethal double-mutant combinations with prp5, -9, -11, and -21 but not with prp3, -4, -8, or -19. Many U2 mutations in highly conserved or invariant RNA structures show no phenotype in a wild-type PRP background but render mutant prp strains inviable, suggesting that the conserved but dispensable U2 elements are essential for efficient cooperative function with specific Prp proteins. Mutant U2 snRNA fails to accumulate in synthetic lethal strains, demonstrating that interaction between U2 RNA and these four Prp proteins contributes to U2 snRNP assembly or stability. Three of the proteins (Prp9p, Prp11p, and Prp21p) are associated with each other and pre-mRNA in U2-dependent splicing complexes in vitro and bind specifically to synthetic U2 snRNA added to crude splicing extracts depleted of endogenous U2 snRNPs. Taken together, the results suggest that Prp9p, -11p, and -21p are U2 snRNP proteins that interact with a structured region including U2 stem loop IIa and mediate the association of the U2 snRNP with pre-mRNA.


1987 ◽  
Vol 262 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-81
Author(s):  
R Reddy ◽  
D Henning ◽  
G Das ◽  
M Harless ◽  
D Wright

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