학술논문

An RNA-targeting CRISPR–Cas13d system alleviates disease-related phenotypes in Huntington’s disease models
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Neuroscience. 26(1)
Subject
Medical Biotechnology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Stem Cell Research
Neurodegenerative
Genetics
Rare Diseases
Brain Disorders
Huntington's Disease
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
5.2 Cellular and gene therapies
Neurological
Mice
Animals
Huntington Disease
RNA
Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats
Corpus Striatum
RNA
Messenger
Phenotype
Huntingtin Protein
Disease Models
Animal
Psychology
Cognitive Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Biological psychology
Language
Abstract
Huntington's disease (HD) is a fatal, dominantly inherited neurodegenerative disorder caused by CAG trinucleotide expansion in exon 1 of the huntingtin (HTT) gene. Since the reduction of pathogenic mutant HTT messenger RNA is therapeutic, we developed a mutant allele-sensitive CAGEX RNA-targeting CRISPR-Cas13d system (Cas13d-CAGEX) that eliminates toxic CAGEX RNA in fibroblasts derived from patients with HD and induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons. We show that intrastriatal delivery of Cas13d-CAGEX via an adeno-associated viral vector selectively reduces mutant HTT mRNA and protein levels in the striatum of heterozygous zQ175 mice, a model of HD. This also led to improved motor coordination, attenuated striatal atrophy and reduction of mutant HTT protein aggregates. These phenotypic improvements lasted for at least eight months without adverse effects and with minimal off-target transcriptomic effects. Taken together, we demonstrate proof of principle of an RNA-targeting CRISPR-Cas13d system as a therapeutic approach for HD, a strategy with implications for the treatment of other dominantly inherited disorders.