Publication | Open Access
Oligonucleotides targeting TCF4 triplet repeat expansion inhibit RNA foci and mis-splicing in Fuchs’ dystrophy
75
Citations
40
References
2018
Year
EngineeringGeneticsMolecular BiologyRetinal TherapiesSplicing VariantTranscriptional RegulationAntisense TherapyMolecular DiagnosticsRna ProcessingEndothelial CellMolecular SignalingOphthalmologyCorneal DystrophyFecd GeneRna BiologyOligonucleotideFuchs ’ DystrophyGene ExpressionCell BiologyGene TherapiesMedicineCell DevelopmentFecd Human Corneas
Fuchs' endothelial corneal dystrophy (FECD) is the most common repeat expansion disorder. FECD impacts 4% of U.S. population and is the leading indication for corneal transplantation. Most cases are caused by an expanded intronic CUG tract in the TCF4 gene that forms nuclear foci, sequesters splicing factors and impairs splicing. We investigated the sense and antisense RNA landscape at the FECD gene and find that the sense-expanded repeat transcript is the predominant species in patient corneas. In patient tissue, sense foci number were negatively correlated with age and showed no correlation with sex. Each endothelial cell has ∼2 sense foci and each foci is single RNA molecule. We designed antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) to target the mutant-repetitive RNA and demonstrated potent inhibition of foci in patient-derived cells. Ex vivo treatment of FECD human corneas effectively inhibits foci and reverses pathological changes in splicing. FECD has the potential to be a model for treating many trinucleotide repeat diseases and targeting the TCF4 expansion with ASOs represents a promising therapeutic strategy to prevent and treat FECD.
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