Reducing Levels of Toxic RNA with Small Molecules
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Abstract
Myotonic dystrophy (DM) is one of
the most common forms of muscular
dystrophy. DM is an autosomal dominant disease caused by a toxic gain
of function RNA. The toxic RNA is produced from expanded noncoding
CTG/CCTG repeats, and these CUG/CCUG repeats sequester the Muscleblind-like
(MBNL) family of RNA binding proteins. The MBNL proteins are regulators
of alternative splicing, and their sequestration has been linked with
mis-splicing events in DM. A previously reported screen for small
molecules found that pentamidine was able to improve splicing defects
associated with DM. Biochemical experiments and cell and mouse model
studies of the disease indicate that pentamidine and related compounds
may work through binding the CTG*CAG repeat DNA to inhibit transcription.
Analysis of a series of methylene linker analogues of pentamidine
revealed that heptamidine reverses splicing defects and rescues myotonia
in a DM1 mouse model