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Engineered U1 snRNAs to modulate alternatively spliced exons.

Methods (San Diego, Calif.) · 2022 · Vol. 205 · pp. 140-148

Abstract

Alternative splicing accounts for a considerable portion of transcriptomic diversity, as most protein-coding genes are spliced into multiple mRNA isoforms. However, errors in splicing patterns can give rise to mis-splicing with pathological consequences, such as the congenital diseases familial dysautonomia, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and spinal muscular atrophy. Small nuclear RNA (snRNA) components of the U snRNP family have been proposed as a therapeutic modality for the treatment of mis-splicing. U1 snRNAs offer great promise, with prior studies demonstrating in vivo efficacy, suggesting additional preclinical development is merited. Improvements in enabling technologies, including screening methodologies, gene delivery vectors, and relevant considerations from gene editing approaches justify further advancement of U1 snRNA as a therapeutic and research tool. With the goal of providing a user-friendly protocol, we compile and demonstrate a methodological toolkit for sequence-specific targeted perturbation of alternatively spliced pre-mRNA with engineered U1 snRNAs. We observe robust modulation of endogenous pre-mRNA transcripts targeted in two contrasting splicing contexts, SMN2 exon 7 and FAS exon 6, exhibiting the utility and applicability of engineered U1 snRNA to both inclusion and exclusion of targeted exons. We anticipate that these demonstrations will contribute to the usability of U1 snRNA in investigating splicing modulation in eukaryotic cells, increasing accessibility to the broader research community.

Funding

R01 HG004659 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
R01 NS103172 NINDS NIH HHS (United States)
T32 GM145427 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)
T32 GM008666 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)
R01 EY029166 NEI NIH HHS (United States)