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    Date Issued2018 (2)2017 (1)Author
    Karumanchi, S. Ananth (3)
    Moore, Melissa J. (3)Alterman, Julia F. (2)Ashar-Patel, Ami (2)Coles, Andrew H. (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationRNA Therapeutics Institute (3)Program in Molecular Medicine (2)Department of Medicine (1)Division of Transfusion Medicine, Department of Medicine (1)Program in Bioinformatics and Integrative Biology (1)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordNucleic Acids, Nucleotides, and Nucleosides (3)Female Urogenital Diseases and Pregnancy Complications (2)Genetics and Genomics (2)Molecular Biology (2)Biochemistry (1)View MoreJournalNature biotechnology (1)Nucleic acids research (1)Scientific reports (1)

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    RNAi modulation of placental sFLT1 for the treatment of preeclampsia

    Turanov, Anton A.; Hassler, Matthew R.; Ashar-Patel, Ami; Alterman, Julia F.; Coles, Andrew H.; Haraszti, Reka A.; Roux, Loic; Godinho, Bruno M. D. C.; Echeverria, Dimas; Karumanchi, S. Ananth; et al. (2018-11-19)
    Preeclampsia is a placentally induced hypertensive disorder of pregnancy that is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality to mothers and fetuses. Clinical manifestations of preterm preeclampsia result from excess circulating soluble vascular endothelial growth factor receptor FLT1 (sFLT1 or sVEGFR1) of placental origin. Here we identify short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) that selectively silence the three sFLT1 mRNA isoforms primarily responsible for placental overexpression of sFLT1 without reducing levels of full-length FLT1 mRNA. Full chemical stabilization in the context of hydrophobic modifications enabled productive siRNA accumulation in the placenta (up to 7% of injected dose) and reduced circulating sFLT1 in pregnant mice (up to 50%). In a baboon preeclampsia model, a single dose of siRNAs suppressed sFLT1 overexpression and clinical signs of preeclampsia. Our results demonstrate RNAi-based extrahepatic modulation of gene expression with nonformulated siRNAs in nonhuman primates and establish a path toward a new treatment paradigm for patients with preterm preeclampsia.
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    Comparison of partially and fully chemically-modified siRNA in conjugate-mediated delivery in vivo

    Hassler, Matthew R.; Turanov, Anton A.; Alterman, Julia F.; Haraszti, Reka A.; Coles, Andrew H.; Osborn, Maire F.; Echeverria, Dimas; Nikan, Mehran; Salomon, William E.; Roux, Loic; et al. (Oxford University Press, 2018-02-08)
    Small interfering RNA (siRNA)-based drugs require chemical modifications or formulation to promote stability, minimize innate immunity, and enable delivery to target tissues. Partially modified siRNAs (up to 70% of the nucleotides) provide significant stabilization in vitro and are commercially available; thus are commonly used to evaluate efficacy of bio-conjugates for in vivo delivery. In contrast, most clinically-advanced non-formulated compounds, using conjugation as a delivery strategy, are fully chemically modified (100% of nucleotides). Here, we compare partially and fully chemically modified siRNAs in conjugate mediated delivery. We show that fully modified siRNAs are retained at 100x greater levels in various tissues, independently of the nature of the conjugate or siRNA sequence, and support productive mRNA silencing. Thus, fully chemically stabilized siRNAs may provide a better platform to identify novel moieties (peptides, aptamers, small molecules) for targeted RNAi delivery.
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    FLT1 and transcriptome-wide polyadenylation site (PAS) analysis in preeclampsia

    Ashar-Patel, Ami; Kaymaz, Yasin; Rajakumar, Augustine; Bailey, Jeffrey A.; Karumanchi, S. Ananth; Moore, Melissa J. (2017-09-22)
    Maternal symptoms of preeclampsia (PE) are primarily driven by excess anti-angiogenic factors originating from the placenta. Chief among these are soluble Flt1 proteins (sFlt1s) produced from alternatively polyadenylated mRNA isoforms. Here we used polyadenylation site sequencing (PAS-Seq) of RNA from normal and PE human placentae to interrogate transcriptome-wide gene expression and alternative polyadenylation signatures associated with early-onset PE (EO-PE; symptom onset < 34 weeks) and late-onset PE (LO-PE; symptom onset > 34 weeks) cohorts. While we observed no general shift in alternative polyadenylation associated with PE, the EO-PE and LO-PE cohorts do exhibit gene expression profiles distinct from both each other and from normal placentae. The only two genes upregulated across all transcriptome-wide PE analyses to date (microarray, RNA-Seq and PAS-Seq) are NRIP1 (RIP140), a transcriptional co-regulator linked to metabolic syndromes associated with obesity, and Flt1. Consistent with sFlt1 overproduction being a significant driver of clinical symptoms, placental Flt1 mRNA levels strongly correlate with maternal blood pressure. For Flt1, just three mRNA isoforms account for > 94% of all transcripts, with increased transcription of the entire locus driving Flt1 upregulation in both EO-PE and LO-PE. These three isoforms thus represent potential targets for therapeutic RNA interference (RNAi) in both early and late presentations.
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