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Figure 1.

AO-Based Manipulation of Pre-mRNA Splicing

(A) Blockage of cryptic splicing as a therapy for β-thalassemia. Mutations within intron 2 of the β-globin gene induce usage of cryptic splice sites that incorporate intronic sequence into the mature mRNA. Disruption of the reading frame introduces a stop codon that results in truncated β-globin protein. Blockage of the cryptic 5′ splice site with AO (blue bar) restores normal splicing pattern and functional β-globin protein is produced.

(B) Restoration of dystrophin production in the mouse model of DMD by exon exclusion. A C→T mutation in exon 23 of the mouse dystrophin gene introduces a stop codon that produces a truncated nonfunctional protein. Blockage of the 5′ splice site of exon 23 disrupts its recognition by splicing machinery, resulting in removal of the in-frame exon from the dystrophin transcript. This facilitates translation of near full-length, semi-functional dystrophin protein.

(C) Exon inclusion to increase production of SMN protein as a therapy for SMA. A silent mutation in the SMN2 gene disrupts an ESE site in exon 7, preventing binding of the SF2/ASF splicing factor and affecting exon recognition such that the majority of SMN2 transcripts lack exon 7, producing a poorly functional SMN protein. Targeting with a bifunctional AO (blue bar) containing a functional ESE sequence recruits the SF2/ASF factor, promoting exon recognition and incorporation into the mature transcript, resulting in translation of normal SMN protein.

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Figure 2.

RNA Trans-Splicing

(A) Correction of CF mutations in the CFTR gene using SMaRT. A PTM containing a binding domain (BD), splicing domain (black line), and a coding domain (orange) incorporating exons 10–24 of wild-type CFTR mRNA, binds to intron 9 of CFTR pre-mRNA (green) containing disease-causing mutations (stars). SMaRT removes the mutant pre-mRNA such that reprogrammed transcript containing wild-type mRNA allows synthesis of a functional protein.

(B) Ribozyme-mediated trans-splicing for application to trinucleotide repeat expansions. Large (50–2,000) CUG repeat expansion in the 3′ untranslated region of the DMPK gene cause myotonic dystrophy. Ribozymes containing a reduced number of CUG repeats are targeted to the mutant DMPK transcript (green) via complementary binding mediated by a guide sequence (black bars). Binding of the ribozyme facilitates cleavage of the DMPK mRNA and trans-splicing of the coding region (orange) and smaller CTG repeat expansion to produce a non-toxic DMPK mRNA transcript.

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Figure 3.

RNAi for Isoform- and Allele-Specific Silencing

(A) Isoform-specific RNAi to target disease-associated isoforms in cancer. VEGF165 isoform overexpression is implicated in tumour angiogenesis. Targeting of the VEGF transcript with siRNA targeted to the exon 5/7 boundaries, in association with RISC, induces specific VEGF165 knockdown, while having no effect on other VEGF isoforms, e.g., VEGF189.

(B) Allele-specific RNAi in the autosomal dominant slow channel congenital myasthenic syndrome. A missense mutation (red bar) in the muscle acetylcholine α-subunit (αS226F) induces a C→U change in the mutant allele. Use of siRNA specific for the αS226F mutation (A binding to U), induces discriminatory silencing of the mutant transcript, leaving the wild-type transcript mostly unaffected.

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