Intra-amniotic antisense oligonucleotide treatment improves phenotypes in preclinical models of spinal muscular atrophy

Borges, Beltran, Brown, Stephen M, Chen, Wan-Jin, Clarke, Maria T, Herzeg, Akos, Park, Jae Hong, Ross, Joshua, Kong, Lingling, Denton, Madeline, Smith, Amy K, Lum, Tony, Zada, Fareha Moulana, Cordero, Marco, Gupta, Nalin, Cook, Sarah E, Murray, Heather, Matson, John, Klein, Stephanie, Bennett, C Frank, Krainer, Adrian R, MacKenzie, Tippi C, Sumner, Charlotte J (May 2025) Intra-amniotic antisense oligonucleotide treatment improves phenotypes in preclinical models of spinal muscular atrophy. Science Translational Medicine, 17 (798). eadv4656. ISSN 1946-6234

Abstract

Neurological disorders with onset before or at birth are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in infants and children. Prenatal treatment has the potential to reduce or prevent irreversible neuronal loss and facilitate normal neurodevelopment. We hypothesized that antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) delivered to the amniotic fluid by intra-amniotic (IA) injection could safely distribute to the fetal central nervous system (CNS) and provide therapeutic benefit in the motor neuron disease spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), caused by mutations of the survival of motor neuron 1 gene (SMN1), leading to deficiency of SMN protein. Although the splice-switching ASO nusinersen ameliorates SMA when delivered postnatally, substantial deficits can remain in severely affected infants. Here, IA injection of ASOs into two mouse models of severe SMA increased SMN expression in the CNS. In SMAΔ7 mice, which manifest pathology in utero, prenatal treatment improved motor neuron numbers, motor axon development, motor behavioral tests, and survival when compared with those in mice treated postnatally (between P1 and P3). To assess the feasibility of prenatal treatment in a large-animal model, ASOs were delivered midgestation to fetal sheep by IA or intracranial injection. ASOs delivered by IA injection distributed to the spinal cord at therapeutic concentrations and to multiple peripheral tissues without evidence of substantial toxicity to the fetus or mother. These data demonstrated that IA delivery of ASOs holds potential as a minimally invasive approach for prenatal treatment of SMA and possibly other severe, early-onset neurological disorders.

Item Type: Paper
Subjects: bioinformatics
bioinformatics > genomics and proteomics > genetics & nucleic acid processing > DNA, RNA structure, function, modification > DNA expression
bioinformatics > genomics and proteomics > genetics & nucleic acid processing > DNA, RNA structure, function, modification
bioinformatics > genomics and proteomics > genetics & nucleic acid processing
bioinformatics > genomics and proteomics
bioinformatics > genomics and proteomics > genetics & nucleic acid processing > DNA, RNA structure, function, modification > oligonucleotide
CSHL Authors:
Communities: CSHL labs > Krainer lab
SWORD Depositor: CSHL Elements
Depositing User: CSHL Elements
Date: 14 May 2025
Date Deposited: 16 May 2025 12:53
Last Modified: 16 May 2025 12:53
Related URLs:
URI: https://repository.cshl.edu/id/eprint/41877

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