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A Dominant Negative Antisense Approach Targeting β-Catenin

Authors: 
Vonbrüll M, Riegel E, Halter C, Aigner M, Bock H, Werner B, Lindhorst T, Czerny T
Citation: 
Mol Biotechnol. 2018 Mar 9. doi: 10.1007/s12033-018-0058-7. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract: 
There have been many attempts to unveil the therapeutic potential of antisense molecules during the last decade. Due to its specific role in canonical Wnt signalling, β-catenin is a potential target for an antisense-based antitumour therapy. In order to establish such a strategy with peptide nucleic acids, we developed a reporter assay for quantification of antisense effects. The luciferase-based assay detects splice blocking with high sensitivity. Using this assay, we show that the splice donor of exon 13 of β-catenin is particularly suitable for an antisense strategy, as it results in a truncated protein which lacks transactivating functions. Since the truncated proteins retain the interactions with Tcf/Lef proteins, they act in a dominant negative fashion competing with wild-type proteins and thus blocking the transcriptional activity of β-catenin. Furthermore, we show that the truncation does not interfere with binding of cadherin and α-catenin, both essential for its function in cell adhesion. Therefore, the antisense strategy blocks Wnt signalling with high efficiency but retains other important functions of β-catenin.
Epub: 
Yes
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: SW480, HeLa pSplice3βcat Ex13 SD
Delivery Method: 
cell scraping, electroporation