| Literature DB >> 30356745 |
Lesca M Holdt1, Alexander Kohlmaier1, Daniel Teupser1.
Abstract
It has recently been reported that thousands of covalently linked circular RNAs (circRNAs) are expressed from human genomes. circRNAs emerge during RNA splicing. circRNAs are circularized in a reaction termed "backsplicing," whereby the spliceosome fuses a splice donor site in a downstream exon to a splice acceptor site in an upstream exon. Although a young field of research, first studies indicate that backsplicing is not an erroneous reaction of the spliceosome. Instead, circRNAs are produced in cells with high cell-type specificity and can exert biologically meaningful and specific functions. These observations and the finding that circRNAs are stable against exonucleolytic decay are raising the question whether circRNAs may be relevant as therapeutic agents and targets. In this review, we start out with a short introduction into classification, biogenesis and general molecular mechanisms of circRNAs. We then describe reports, where manipulating circRNA abundance has been shown to have therapeutic value in animal disease models in vivo, with a focus on cardiovascular disease (CVD). Starting from existing approaches, we outline particular challenges and opportunities for future circRNA-based therapeutic approaches that exploit stability and molecular effector functions of native circRNAs. We end with considerations which designer functions could be engineered into artificial therapeutic circular RNAs.Entities:
Keywords: aptamer; circRNA; innate immnuity; microRNA sponges; splicing; transcription
Year: 2018 PMID: 30356745 PMCID: PMC6189416 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.01262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Therapeutic potential of circRNAs in CVD.
| Name (Species) | Investigated disease | Expression in disease | Endogenous function | Target cells (indirect evidence) | Protection from disease through | Mouse models | Dose; route | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Myocardial infarction | Up | Deleterious | Cardiomyocytes? | circRNA KD | Injection of adenovirus expressing shRNAs against | 2 × 1011 Pfu; once per 14 days | ||
| Heart failure | Down | Protective | Cardiomyocytes? | circRNA OE | Injection of | 2 × 1011 Pfu; once per 14 days | ||
| Heart failure | n.d. | Protective | Cardiomyocytes? | circRNA OE | Intraperitoneally injection of nanoparticles with mPEG-SH-formulated DNA plasmid (pBS) expressing human | 100 mg plasmid; 2-3x per week | ||
| Heart failure | Up | Deleterious | Cardiomyocytes, fibroblasts? | circRNA KD | Injection of PEG-(10-nm) gold nanoparticle with siRNAs against | 6 μg, 3 times/week | ||
| Diabetic retinopathy | Up | Deleterious | Retinal vascular endothelial cells? | circRNA KD | Intravitreal injection of adenovirus-encoded shRNAs targeting | 1.5 × 109 Pfu; once per month | ||
| Ischemic retinopathy | Up | Deleterious | Retinal vascular endothelial cells? | circRNA KD | Intravitreal injection of adenovirus-encoded shRNAs against | 1 × 107 Pfu; once-twice per week | ||
| Stroke | Down | Protective | Brain endothelial cells? | circRNA OE | Injection of | 5 × 108 Pfu; once per 2 weeks | ||