4.3 Article

Suppression of choroid plexus transthyretin levels by antisense oligonucleotide treatment

Journal

AMYLOID-JOURNAL OF PROTEIN FOLDING DISORDERS
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 43-49

Publisher

INFORMA HEALTHCARE
DOI: 10.3109/13506129.2010.483121

Keywords

Amyloidosis; transthyretin; choroid plexus; intracerebral haemorrhage; dementia; hydrocephalus

Funding

  1. NIH [PHS AG10133, DK42111, RR-00750]
  2. Veterans Affairs Medical Research
  3. Marion E. Jacobson Fund
  4. Machado Family Research Fund
  5. Thagard Foundation

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Leptomeningeal amyloidosis associated with mutations in transthyretin (TTR) is a rare but fatal form of amyloidosis. Dementia and intracerebral haemorrhage are prominent features of this disease for which no specific therapy is known. In previous studies, we have shown that antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) specific for human TTR could inhibit hepatic synthesis of TTR in mice transgenic for a human amyloid-associated TTR and may offer a medical means of treating systemic TTR amyloidosis. Parenteral administration of TTR-specific ASO, however, had no effect on the expression of TTR by the choroid plexus, which is believed to be the source of the amyloid protein in patients who have leptomeningeal amyloidosis. In the present study, mice transgenic for the human TTR amyloid-associated mutation Ile84Ser were treated by administration of TTR-specific ASO (50 mg or 75 mg per day) via an osmotic pump into the cerebral ventricular system over a 4-week period. Intraventricular administration of TTR-specific ASO significantly reduced choroid human TTR mRNA levels, and these findings correlated with decreased TTR in choroid plexus epithelial cells as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry. Suppression of choroid TTR expression by intraventricular administered ASO may offer a medical means of treating leptomeningeal amyloidosis.

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