Pathological impact of SMN2 mis-splicing in adult SMA mice

نویسندگان

  • Kentaro Sahashi
  • Karen K Y Ling
  • Yimin Hua
  • John Erby Wilkinson
  • Tomoki Nomakuchi
  • Frank Rigo
  • Gene Hung
  • David Xu
  • Ya-Ping Jiang
  • Richard Z Lin
  • Chien-Ping Ko
  • C Frank Bennett
  • Adrian R Krainer
چکیده

Loss-of-function mutations in SMN1 cause spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a leading genetic cause of infant mortality. The related SMN2 gene expresses suboptimal levels of functional SMN protein, due to a splicing defect. Many SMA patients reach adulthood, and there is also adult-onset (type IV) SMA. There is currently no animal model for adult-onset SMA, and the tissue-specific pathogenesis of post-developmental SMN deficiency remains elusive. Here, we use an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) to exacerbate SMN2 mis-splicing. Intracerebroventricular ASO injection in adult SMN2-transgenic mice phenocopies key aspects of adult-onset SMA, including delayed-onset motor dysfunction and relevant histopathological features. SMN2 mis-splicing increases during late-stage disease, likely accelerating disease progression. Systemic ASO injection in adult mice causes peripheral SMN2 mis-splicing and affects prognosis, eliciting marked liver and heart pathologies, with decreased IGF1 levels. ASO dose-response and time-course studies suggest that only moderate SMN levels are required in the adult central nervous system, and treatment with a splicing-correcting ASO shows a broad therapeutic time window. We describe distinctive pathological features of adult-onset and early-onset SMA.

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عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 5  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2013