LNA-mediated microRNA silencing in non-human primates

J Elmén, M Lindow, S Schütz, M Lawrence, A Petri… - Nature, 2008 - nature.com
J Elmén, M Lindow, S Schütz, M Lawrence, A Petri, S Obad, M Lindholm, M Hedtjärn…
Nature, 2008nature.com
Abstract microRNAs (miRNAs) are small regulatory RNAs that are important in development
and disease,, and therefore represent a potential new class of targets for therapeutic
intervention. Despite recent progress in silencing of miRNAs in rodents,, the development of
effective and safe approaches for sequence-specific antagonism of miRNAs in vivo remains
a significant scientific and therapeutic challenge. Moreover, there are no reports of miRNA
antagonism in primates. Here we show that the simple systemic delivery of a unconjugated …
Abstract
microRNAs (miRNAs) are small regulatory RNAs that are important in development and disease,, and therefore represent a potential new class of targets for therapeutic intervention. Despite recent progress in silencing of miRNAs in rodents,, the development of effective and safe approaches for sequence-specific antagonism of miRNAs in vivo remains a significant scientific and therapeutic challenge. Moreover, there are no reports of miRNA antagonism in primates. Here we show that the simple systemic delivery of a unconjugated, PBS-formulated locked-nucleic-acid-modified oligonucleotide (LNA-antimiR) effectively antagonizes the liver-expressed miR-122 in non-human primates. Acute administration by intravenous injections of 3 or 10 mg kg-1 LNA-antimiR to African green monkeys resulted in uptake of the LNA-antimiR in the cytoplasm of primate hepatocytes and formation of stable heteroduplexes between the LNA-antimiR and miR-122. This was accompanied by depletion of mature miR-122 and dose-dependent lowering of plasma cholesterol. Efficient silencing of miR-122 was achieved in primates by three doses of 10 mg kg-1 LNA-antimiR, leading to a long-lasting and reversible decrease in total plasma cholesterol without any evidence for LNA-associated toxicities or histopathological changes in the study animals. Our findings demonstrate the utility of systemically administered LNA-antimiRs in exploring miRNA function in rodents and primates, and support the potential of these compounds as a new class of therapeutics for disease-associated miRNAs.
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