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Hepatotoxicity of high affinity gapmer antisense oligonucleotides is mediated by RNase H1 dependent promiscuous reduction of very long pre-mRNA transcripts

Authors :
Thazha P. Prakash
Husam S. Younis
Susan M. Freier
Melanie Katz
Stanley T. Crooke
C. Frank Bennett
Todd Machemer
Sebastien A. Burel
Huynh-Hoa Bui
Christopher E. Hart
Eric E. Swayze
Andrew T. Watt
Patrick Cauntay
Punit P. Seth
Mahyar Sabripour
Jill Hsiao
Scott P. Henry
Amy Dan
Gene Hung
Source :
Nucleic Acids Research
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

High affinity antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) containing bicylic modifications (BNA) such as locked nucleic acid (LNA) designed to induce target RNA cleavage have been shown to have enhanced potency along with a higher propensity to cause hepatotoxicity. In order to understand the mechanism of this hepatotoxicity, transcriptional profiles were collected from the livers of mice treated with a panel of highly efficacious hepatotoxic or non-hepatotoxic LNA ASOs. We observed highly selective transcript knockdown in mice treated with non-hepatotoxic LNA ASOs, while the levels of many unintended transcripts were reduced in mice treated with hepatotoxic LNA ASOs. This transcriptional signature was concurrent with on-target RNA reduction and preceded transaminitis. Remarkably, the mRNA transcripts commonly reduced by toxic LNA ASOs were generally not strongly associated with any particular biological process, cellular component or functional group. However, they tended to have much longer pre-mRNA transcripts. We also demonstrate that the off-target RNA knockdown and hepatotoxicity is attenuated by RNase H1 knockdown, and that this effect can be generalized to high affinity modifications beyond LNA. This suggests that for a certain set of ASOs containing high affinity modifications such as LNA, hepatotoxicity can occur as a result of unintended off-target RNase H1 dependent RNA degradation.

Details

ISSN :
13624962
Volume :
44
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nucleic acids research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c84634983f76ef18c0683f4653d66581