Systemic delivery of antagomirs during blood-brain barrier disruption is disease-modifying in experimental epilepsy
Reschke, Cristina R.; Silva, Luiz F.A.; Vangoor, Vamshidhar R.; Rosso, Massimo; David, Bastian; Cavanagh, Brenton L.; Connolly, Niamh M.C.; Brennan, Gary P.; Sanz-Rodriguez, Amaya; Mooney, Catherine; Batool, Aasia; Greene, Chris; Brennan, Marian; Conroy, Ronan M.; Rüber, Theodor; Prehn, Jochen H.M.; Campbell, Matthew; Pasterkamp, R. Jeroen; Henshall, David C.
(2021) Molecular Therapy, volume 29, issue 6, pp. 2041 - 2052
(Article)
Abstract
Oligonucleotide therapies offer precision treatments for a variety of neurological diseases, including epilepsy, but their deployment is hampered by the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Previous studies showed that intracerebroventricular injection of an antisense oligonucleotide (antagomir) targeting microRNA-134 (Ant-134) reduced evoked and spontaneous seizures in animal models of epilepsy. In this study,
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we used assays of serum protein and tracer extravasation to determine that BBB disruption occurring after status epilepticus in mice was sufficient to permit passage of systemically injected Ant-134 into the brain parenchyma. Intraperitoneal and intravenous injection of Ant-134 reached the hippocampus and blocked seizure-induced upregulation of miR-134. A single intraperitoneal injection of Ant-134 at 2 h after status epilepticus in mice resulted in potent suppression of spontaneous recurrent seizures, reaching a 99.5% reduction during recordings at 3 months. The duration of spontaneous seizures, when they occurred, was also reduced in Ant-134-treated mice. In vivo knockdown of LIM kinase-1 (Limk-1) increased seizure frequency in Ant-134-treated mice, implicating de-repression of Limk-1 in the antagomir mechanism. These studies indicate that systemic delivery of Ant-134 reaches the brain and produces long-lasting seizure-suppressive effects after systemic injection in mice when timed with BBB disruption and may be a clinically viable approach for this and other disease-modifying microRNA therapies.
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Keywords: antagomirs, antiepileptic drug, antisense oligonucleotides, chemoconvulsant, epileptogenesis, hippocampal sclerosis, noncoding RNA, status epilepticus, Molecular Medicine, Molecular Biology, Genetics, Pharmacology, Drug Discovery
ISSN: 1525-0016
Publisher: Cell Press
Note: Funding Information: The authors would like to thank Eva Jimenez-Mateos and Tobias Engel for advice on technical aspects. This work was supported in part by a research grant from Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) under grant no. 16/RC/3948 and co-funded under the European Regional Development Fund and by FutureNeuro industry partners. The authors also acknowledge funding from the Health Research Board Ireland ( HRA-POR-2013-325 to D.C.H.) and Science Foundation Ireland ( 13/IA/1891 and 11/TIDA/B1988 to D.C.H.; 17/TIDA/5002 to C.R.R.; SFI/14/ADV/RC2721 to C.M.) and fellowships from the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq; to L.F.A.S.); the Dutch Epilepsiefonds ( WAR 12-08 and WAR 15-05 to R.J.P.); the Irish Research Council (to C.R.R.); CURE Epilepsy (to D.C.H. and C.R.R.); and from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme ( FP7/2007-2013 ) under grant agreement no. 602130 (EpimiRNA). Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors
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