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Splice switching oligonucleotide mediated gene knockdown in B cells and plasma cells.

Authors: 
Marchalot A, Lambert J-M, Boyer F, Pollet J, Moreau J, Feuillard J, Faumont N, Delpy L
Citation: 
bioRxiv. 2020;[preprint] doi:10.1101/2020.09.18.302984
Abstract: 
The need to identify new therapeutic approaches to the treatment of cancers of the B lymphoid lineage is crucial. Unlike CRISPR/Cas technology, antisense strategies result in transient modifications of gene expression and lack mutagenic effects at the DNA level. Here, we provide evidence for efficient knockdown of c-REL and RELA expression after treatment with splice switching antisense oligonucleotides (SSO) inducing exon skipping and reading frameshifts. We also developed a tool to facilitate the choice of exons for on purpose inhibition of mouse and human gene expression. Interestingly, treatments with morpholino SSO targeting the c-REL exon 2 donor splice site or RELA exon 5 acceptor splice site elicited very efficient knockdown in diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) cell lines and antibody-secreting cells derived from primary human B cells. Consistent with the clinical relevance of c-REL activation in DLBCLs, treatment with c-REL SSO induced major alterations in NF-κB and TNF signalling pathways and strongly decreased cell viability. Altogether, SSO-mediated knockdown is a powerful approach to transiently inhibit the expression of given genes in B-lineage cells that should pave the way for cancer treatments, provided optimized ligand-conjugations for in vivo delivery.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: SUDHL4 and OCILY10 (DLBCL) lines, primary Human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear B Cells (PBMC)
Delivery Method: 
Vivo-Morpholino versus "transfection" of standard Morpholinos