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  • Spt4 selectively regulates ...
    Kramer, Nicholas J.; Carlomagno, Yari; Zhang, Yong-Jie; Almeida, Sandra; Cook, Casey N.; Gendron, Tania F.; Prudencio, Mercedes; Van Blitterswijk, Marka; Belzil, Veronique; Couthouis, Julien; Paul, Joseph West; Goodman, Lindsey D.; Daughrity, Lillian; Chew, Jeannie; Garrett, Aliesha; Pregent, Luc; Jansen-West, Karen; Tabassian, Lilia J.; Rademakers, Rosa; Boylan, Kevin; Graff-Radford, Neill R.; Josephs, Keith A.; Parisi, Joseph E.; Knopman, David S.; Petersen, Ronald C.; Boeve, Bradley F.; Deng, Ning; Feng, Yanan; Cheng, Tzu-Hao; Dickson, Dennis W.; Cohen, Stanley N.; Bonini, Nancy M.; Link, Christopher D.; Gao, Fen-Biao; Petrucelli, Leonard; Gitler, Aaron D.

    Science, 08/2016, Letnik: 353, Številka: 6300
    Journal Article

    An expanded hexanucleotide repeat in C9orf72 causes amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia (c9FTD/ALS). Therapeutics are being developed to target RNAs containing the expanded repeat sequence (GGGGCC); however, this approach is complicated by the presence of antisense strand transcription of expanded GGCCCC repeats. We found that targeting the transcription elongation factor Spt4 selectively decreased production of both sense and antisense expanded transcripts, as well as their translated dipeptide repeat (DPR) products, and also mitigated degeneration in animal models. Knockdown of SUPT4H1, the human Spt4 ortholog, similarly decreased production of sense and antisense RNA foci, as well as DPR proteins, in patient cells. Therapeutic targeting of a single factor to eliminate c9FTD/ALS pathological features offers advantages over approaches that require targeting sense and antisense repeats separately.