| Literature DB >> 18368051 |
Joacim Elmén1, Morten Lindow, Sylvia Schütz, Matthew Lawrence, Andreas Petri, Susanna Obad, Marie Lindholm, Maj Hedtjärn, Henrik Frydenlund Hansen, Urs Berger, Steven Gullans, Phil Kearney, Peter Sarnow, Ellen Marie Straarup, Sakari Kauppinen.
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.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18368051 DOI: 10.1038/nature06783
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962