| Literature DB >> 20721293 |
Malgorzata Sierant1, Katarzyna Kubiak, Julia Kazmierczak-Baranska, Masaki Warashina, Tomoko Kuwabara, Barbara Nawrot.
Abstract
Beta-secretase (BACE1) is the major enzyme participating in generation of toxic amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides, identified in amyloid plaques of Alzheimer's disease (AD) brains. Its downregulation results in decreasing secretion of Abeta. Thus, BACE1 silencing by RNAi represents possible strategy for antiamyloid therapy in the treatment of AD. In this study, a series of newly designed sequences of synthetic and vector-encoded siRNAs (pSilencer, pcPURhU6, and lentivirus) were tested against overexpressed and endogenous BACE1 in several cell lines and in adult neural progenitor cells, derived from rat hippocampus. SiRNAs active in human, mouse, and rat cell models were shown to diminish the level of BACE1. In HCN A94 cells, two BACE1-specific siRNAs did not alter the expression of genes of BACE2 and several selected genes involved in neurogenesis (Synapsin I, betaIII-Tubulin, Calbidin, NeuroD1, GluR2, CREB, MeCP2, PKR), however, remarkable lowering of SCG10 mRNA, coding protein of stathmin family, important in the development of nervous system, was observed.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20721293 PMCID: PMC2915613 DOI: 10.4061/2009/257403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Alzheimers Dis
List of genes selected for expression level evaluation in HCN A94 cells transfected with BACE1-specific si-5b and si-6, coded in lentivirus vector.
| No | Protein | Name/Function | % of silencing with Lv-si-8 | % of silencing with Lv-si-9 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | BACE1 | Beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 1 | >70 | >75 |
| 2 | BACE2 | Beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 2 | — | — |
| 3 | SCG10 | Superior cervical ganglion-10 | 70 | 70 |
| 4 | NeuroD1 | Neurogenic differentiation 1 | — | — |
| 5 | GluR2 | Glutamate receptor 2 | — | — |
| 6 | CREB | cAMP responsive element binding protein 1 | — | — |
| 7 | MeCP2 | Methyl CpG binding protein 2 | — | — |
| 8 | Synapsin 1 | Protein involved in the regulation of neurotransmitter release at synapses | — | — |
| 9 | PKR | Double stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase | — | — |
| 10 | GAPDH | Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase | — | — |
| 11 | Sox-2 | SRY (sex determining region Y)-box 2 | — | — |
| 12 | NRSF/REST | Neural restrictive silencing factor | — | — |
| 13 | NaChII | Sodium channel, voltage-gated, type II | — | — |
| 14 |
| Neuro-specific tubulin, microtubules component | — | — |
| 15 | Calbidin | Vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein | — | — |
| 16 | BDNF | Brain-derived neurotrophic factor | — | — |
| 17 | GFAP | Glial fibrillary acidic protein, protein specific for astrocytes in CNS | — | — |
| 18 | APP | Amyloid Precursor Protein | — | — |
| 19 | Neurogenin 1–3 | Neurogenins, family of the transcription factors involved in the neuronal differentiation | — | — |
siRNA sequences, target sites in human, mouse, and rat mRNA of BACE1 and silencing activity of used siRNA- and shRNA-coded plasmids (presented as % of BACE1 gene expression).
| Target gene (nt numbers) | % of BACE-GFP expression in DFA by siRNA (5/1/0.1 nM)* | % of BACE-GFP expression in DFA by shRNA in plasmid∗# | % of BACE1 expression in SH-SY5Y (human) cells by siRNA (RT-PCR/western blot)∗& | % of BACE1 expression in HEK293 (human)/M15 mice cells by shRNA in pcPURhU6@ (RT-PCR) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sequence: | ||||||
| No | 5′-sense strand-3′ | |||||
| 3′-antisense strand-5′ | ||||||
| si-0 | 5′-AAUCAGAUUGAACCUUCAUTT-3′ | non-silencing control siRNA | 100 | 100 | 86 | 100 |
| 3′-TTUUAGUCUAACUUGGAAGUA-5′ | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| si-1 | 5′-UACAGGCAGCAGUAACUUUTT-3′ |
| 27/31/58 | 40 (pSilencer) | nd | nd |
| 3′-TTAUGUCCGUCGUCAUUGAAA-5′ | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| si-2 | 5′-AGACGCUCAACAUCCUGGUTT-3′ |
| 6/22/76 | nd | 61/60 | nd |
| 3′-TTUCUGCGAGUUGUAGGACCA-5′ | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| si-3 | 5′-GAAUCAGACAAGUUCUUCAUC-3′ |
| 0.0/1.1/16 | 5 (pSilencer) | 55/61 | nd |
| 3′-GACUUAGUCUGUUCAAGAAGU-5′ | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| si-4 | 5′-AAUCAGACAAGUUCUUCAUTT-3′ |
| 0.0/1.7/15 | 11 (pSilencer) | 34/61 | nd |
| 3′- TTUUAGUCUGUUCAAGAAGUA-5′ | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| si-5a | 5′-AUCAGACAAGUUCUUCAUCAA-3′ |
| 28/35/60 | 12 (pcPURhU6) | nd | 32/92 |
| 3′-GAUAGUCUGUUCAAGAAGUAG-5′ | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| si-5b | 5′-AUCGGACAAGUUCUUCAUCAA-3′ | h (-) | nd | nd | nd | 52/30 |
| 3′-GAUAGCCUGUUCAAGAAGUAG-5′ | ||||||
|
| ||||||
| si-6 | 5′-GACUGUGGCUACAACAUUCCA-3′ |
| 1.3/8/45 | 20 (pcPURhU6) | nd | 51/71 |
| 3′-UUCUGACACCGAUGUUGUAAG-5′ | ||||||
*: GFP/RFP relative fluorescence of the control, HeLa cells transfected with control nonsilencing siRNA (si-0) or pSilencer-Neg plasmid/Lipofectamine 2000 were taken as a reference nonsilenced value of 100%;
#: plasmid DNA 30 ng/well (96-well plate);
&: 100 nM siRNA;
@: plasmid DNA 2 μg/well (6-well plate);
Nd: not determined.
Figure 1Expression of pBACE-GFP/pDsRed2-N1 plasmids in HeLa cells (a) and silencing effect of selected siRNAs in these cells (b).
Figure 2Comparison of transfection efficiency of pGFP-BACE or pDsRed2-N1 plasmids in HeLa and SH-SY5Y cells.
Figure 3Optimizing of the loop sequence of si-6-based shRNA in HEK293 cells, as evaluated by RT-PCR: (1) pcPURhU6 si-6 (21 bp)-miR26, (2) si-6 (19 bp) with 9-nt UUCAAGAGA loop, (3) si-6 (21 bp) with 9-nt UUCAAGAGA loop, (4) si-6 (21 bp) with 10-nt CUUCCUGUCA (loop from miRNA23), and (5) si-6 (21 bp) with 19-nt UAGUGAAGCCACAGAUGUA (loop from miRNA30).
Figure 4Influence of Lv-si-5b and Lv-si-6 and BACE1 silencing on expression of selected genes in HCN A94 cells, as determined by RT-PCR.