4.6 Article

Antisense-Mediated Down-Regulation of Factor V-Short Splicing in a Liver Cell Line Model

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app11209621

Keywords

coagulation; Factor V-short; F5; alternative splicing; splicing modulation; morpholino; antisense oligonucleotides; bleeding

Funding

  1. Dutch Thrombosis Foundation (TSN) [2014-1]
  2. Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht (CARIM)

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The study investigated the possibility of decreasing FV-short splicing through antisense-based splicing modulation, successfully reducing the expression levels of FV-short in a liver cell line. This may lay the foundation for novel therapeutic approaches to bleeding disorders caused by FV-short over-expression or elevated TFPI alpha levels.
Coagulation factor V (FV) is a liver-derived protein encoded by the F5 gene. Alternative splicing of F5 exon 13 produces a low-abundance splicing isoform, known as FV-short, which binds the anticoagulant protein tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI alpha) with high affinity, stabilising it in the circulation and potently enhancing its anticoagulant activity. Accordingly, rare F5 gene mutations that up-regulate FV-short splicing are associated with bleeding. In this study we have explored the possibility of decreasing FV-short splicing by antisense-based splicing modulation. To this end, we have designed morpholino antisense oligonucleotides (MAOs) targeting the FV-short-specific donor and acceptor splice sites and tested their efficacy in a liver cell line (HepG2) that naturally expresses full-length FV and FV-short. Cells were treated with 0-20 mu M MAO, and full-length FV and FV-short mRNA expression was analysed by RT-(q)PCR. Both MAOs, alone or in combination, decreased the FV-short/full-length FV mRNA ratio down to ~50% of its original value in a specific and dose-dependent manner. This pilot study provides proof-of-principle for the possibility to decrease FV-short expression by antisense-mediated splicing modulation. In turn, this may form the basis for novel therapeutic approaches to bleeding disorders caused by FV-short over-expression and/or elevated TFPI alpha (activity) levels.

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