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dCas9-Based Scn1a Gene Activation Restores Inhibitory Interneuron Excitability and Attenuates Seizures in Dravet Syndrome Mice

Authors :
Letizia Leocani
Valerio Castoldi
Timothy Church
Raffaele Ricci
Jenna C Carpenter
Claudia Di Berardino
Silvia Marenna
Stephanie Schorge
Gabriele Lignani
Fabio Benfenati
Dimitri M. Kullmann
Gaia Colasante
Luca Massimino
Simone Bido
Vania Broccoli
Simone Brusco
Serena Giannelli
Nicholas Valassina
Giuseppe Morabito
Colasante, G.
Lignani, G.
Brusco, S.
Di Berardino, C.
Carpenter, J.
Giannelli, S.
Valassina, N.
Bido, S.
Ricci, R.
Castoldi, V.
Marenna, S.
Church, T.
Massimino, L.
Morabito, G.
Benfenati, F.
Schorge, S.
Leocani, L.
Kullmann, D. M.
Broccoli, V.
Colasante, G
Lignani, G
Brusco, S
Di Berardino, C
Carpenter, J
Giannelli, S
Valassina, N
Bido, S
Ricci, R
Castoldi, V
Marenna, S
Church, T
Massimino, L
Morabito, G
Benfenati, F
Schorge, S
Leocani, L
Kullmann, D
Vania Broccoli, A
Source :
Mol Ther
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cell Press, 2019.

Abstract

Dravet syndrome (DS) is a severe epileptic encephalopathy caused mainly by heterozygous loss-of-function mutations of the SCN1A gene, indicating haploinsufficiency as the pathogenic mechanism. Here we tested whether catalytically dead Cas9 (dCas9)-mediated Scn1a gene activation can rescue Scn1a haploinsufficiency in a mouse DS model and restore physiological levels of its gene product, the Na(v)1.1 voltage-gated sodium channel. We screened single guide RNAs (sgRNAs) for their ability to stimulate Scn1a transcription in association with the dCas9 activation system. We identified a specific sgRNA that increases Scn1a gene expression levels in cell lines and primary neurons with high specificity. Na(v)1.1 protein levels were augmented, as was the ability of wild-type immature GABAergic interneurons to fire action potentials. A similar enhancement of Scn1a transcription was achieved in mature DS interneurons, rescuing their ability to fire. To test the therapeutic potential of this approach, we delivered the Scn1a-dCas9 activation system to DS pups using adeno-associated viruses. Parvalbumin interneurons recovered their firing ability, and febrile seizures were significantly attenuated. Our results pave the way for exploiting dCas9-based gene activation as an effective and targeted approach to DS and other disorders resulting from altered gene dosage.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mol Ther
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e8cc44ea332ea26aebe773b0166de647