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Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa

Despite the recent success of gene-based complementation approaches for genetic recessive traits, the development of therapeutic strategies for gain-of-function mutations poses great challenges. General therapeutic principles to correct these genetic defects mostly rely on post-transcriptional gene...

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Autores principales: Mussolino, Claudio, Sanges, Daniela, Marrocco, Elena, Bonetti, Ciro, Di Vicino, Umberto, Marigo, Valeria, Auricchio, Alberto, Meroni, Germana, Surace, Enrico Maria
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: WILEY-VCH Verlag 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3085076/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21268285
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/emmm.201000119
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author Mussolino, Claudio
Sanges, Daniela
Marrocco, Elena
Bonetti, Ciro
Di Vicino, Umberto
Marigo, Valeria
Auricchio, Alberto
Meroni, Germana
Surace, Enrico Maria
author_facet Mussolino, Claudio
Sanges, Daniela
Marrocco, Elena
Bonetti, Ciro
Di Vicino, Umberto
Marigo, Valeria
Auricchio, Alberto
Meroni, Germana
Surace, Enrico Maria
author_sort Mussolino, Claudio
collection PubMed
description Despite the recent success of gene-based complementation approaches for genetic recessive traits, the development of therapeutic strategies for gain-of-function mutations poses great challenges. General therapeutic principles to correct these genetic defects mostly rely on post-transcriptional gene regulation (RNA silencing). Engineered zinc-finger (ZF) protein-based repression of transcription may represent a novel approach for treating gain-of-function mutations, although proof-of-concept of this use is still lacking. Here, we generated a series of transcriptional repressors to silence human rhodopsin (hRHO), the gene most abundantly expressed in retinal photoreceptors. The strategy was designed to suppress both the mutated and the wild-type hRHO allele in a mutational-independent fashion, to overcome mutational heterogeneity of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa due to hRHO mutations. Here we demonstrate that ZF proteins promote a robust transcriptional repression of hRHO in a transgenic mouse model of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. Furthermore, we show that specifically decreasing the mutated human RHO transcript in conjunction with unaltered expression of the endogenous murine Rho gene results in amelioration of disease progression, as demonstrated by significant improvements in retinal morphology and function. This zinc-finger-based mutation-independent approach paves the way towards a ‘repression–replacement’ strategy, which is expected to facilitate widespread applications in the development of novel therapeutics for a variety of disorders that are due to gain-of-function mutations.
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spelling pubmed-30850762011-05-13 Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa Mussolino, Claudio Sanges, Daniela Marrocco, Elena Bonetti, Ciro Di Vicino, Umberto Marigo, Valeria Auricchio, Alberto Meroni, Germana Surace, Enrico Maria EMBO Mol Med Report Despite the recent success of gene-based complementation approaches for genetic recessive traits, the development of therapeutic strategies for gain-of-function mutations poses great challenges. General therapeutic principles to correct these genetic defects mostly rely on post-transcriptional gene regulation (RNA silencing). Engineered zinc-finger (ZF) protein-based repression of transcription may represent a novel approach for treating gain-of-function mutations, although proof-of-concept of this use is still lacking. Here, we generated a series of transcriptional repressors to silence human rhodopsin (hRHO), the gene most abundantly expressed in retinal photoreceptors. The strategy was designed to suppress both the mutated and the wild-type hRHO allele in a mutational-independent fashion, to overcome mutational heterogeneity of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa due to hRHO mutations. Here we demonstrate that ZF proteins promote a robust transcriptional repression of hRHO in a transgenic mouse model of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. Furthermore, we show that specifically decreasing the mutated human RHO transcript in conjunction with unaltered expression of the endogenous murine Rho gene results in amelioration of disease progression, as demonstrated by significant improvements in retinal morphology and function. This zinc-finger-based mutation-independent approach paves the way towards a ‘repression–replacement’ strategy, which is expected to facilitate widespread applications in the development of novel therapeutics for a variety of disorders that are due to gain-of-function mutations. WILEY-VCH Verlag 2011-03 2011-01-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3085076/ /pubmed/21268285 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/emmm.201000119 Text en Copyright © 2011 EMBO Molecular Medicine
spellingShingle Report
Mussolino, Claudio
Sanges, Daniela
Marrocco, Elena
Bonetti, Ciro
Di Vicino, Umberto
Marigo, Valeria
Auricchio, Alberto
Meroni, Germana
Surace, Enrico Maria
Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa
title Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa
title_full Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa
title_fullStr Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa
title_full_unstemmed Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa
title_short Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa
title_sort zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa
topic Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3085076/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21268285
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/emmm.201000119
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