Nonsense suppression therapies in human genetic diseases

被引:0
|
作者
Patrícia Martins-Dias
Luísa Romão
机构
[1] Instituto Nacional de Saúde Doutor Ricardo Jorge,Department of Human Genetics
[2] University of Lisboa,Faculty of Sciences, BioISI
来源
关键词
Nonsense mutation; Premature termination codon (PTC); Readthrough therapy; Stop codon readthrough; Translation termination;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
About 11% of all human disease-associated gene lesions are nonsense mutations, resulting in the introduction of an in-frame premature translation-termination codon (PTC) into the protein-coding gene sequence. When translated, PTC-containing mRNAs originate truncated and often dysfunctional proteins that might be non-functional or have gain-of-function or dominant-negative effects. Therapeutic strategies aimed at suppressing PTCs to restore deficient protein function—the so-called nonsense suppression (or PTC readthrough) therapies—have the potential to provide a therapeutic benefit for many patients and in a broad range of genetic disorders, including cancer. These therapeutic approaches comprise the use of translational readthrough-inducing compounds that make the translational machinery recode an in-frame PTC into a sense codon. However, most of the mRNAs carrying a PTC can be rapidly degraded by the surveillance mechanism of nonsense-mediated decay (NMD), thus decreasing the levels of PTC-containing mRNAs in the cell and their availability for PTC readthrough. Accordingly, the use of NMD inhibitors, or readthrough-compound potentiators, may enhance the efficiency of PTC suppression. Here, we review the mechanisms of PTC readthrough and their regulation, as well as the recent advances in the development of novel approaches for PTC suppression, and their role in personalized medicine.
引用
收藏
页码:4677 / 4701
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] SUPPRESSION OF A NONSENSE MUTATION IN HUMAN-CELLS INVIVO BY AMINOGLYCOSIDE ANTIBIOTICS
    MOGG, AE
    HEYWOOD, LA
    BURKE, JF
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 1986, 54 (02) : 372 - 372
  • [42] Editorial: Endocrine and metabolic diseases - genetic impact and therapies
    Jeru, Isabelle
    Feve, Bruno
    Jockers, Ralf
    FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2022, 13
  • [43] Genetic therapies for RNA mis-splicing diseases
    Hammond, Suzan M.
    Wood, Matthew J. A.
    TRENDS IN GENETICS, 2011, 27 (05) : 196 - 205
  • [44] NONSENSE SUPPRESSION IN DICTYOSTELIUM DISCOIDEUM
    REINDL, N
    BRECHNER, T
    NERKE, K
    DINGERMANN, T
    BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY HOPPE-SEYLER, 1988, 369 (09): : 899 - 899
  • [45] Repurposing tRNAs for nonsense suppression
    Albers, Suki
    Beckert, Bertrand
    Matthies, Marco C.
    Mandava, Chandra Sekhar
    Schuster, Raphael
    Seuring, Carolin
    Riedner, Maria
    Sanyal, Suparna
    Torda, Andrew E.
    Wilson, Daniel N.
    Ignatova, Zoya
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2021, 12 (01)
  • [46] ROLE OF SRNA IN NONSENSE SUPPRESSION
    ANDOH, T
    OZEKI, H
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF GENETICS, 1967, 42 (06): : 453 - &
  • [47] Nonsense suppression in mammalian cells
    Kuchino, Y
    Muramatsu, T
    BIOCHIMIE, 1996, 78 (11-12) : 1007 - 1015
  • [48] Repurposing tRNAs for nonsense suppression
    Suki Albers
    Bertrand Beckert
    Marco C. Matthies
    Chandra Sekhar Mandava
    Raphael Schuster
    Carolin Seuring
    Maria Riedner
    Suparna Sanyal
    Andrew E. Torda
    Daniel N. Wilson
    Zoya Ignatova
    Nature Communications, 12
  • [49] T cell therapies for human polyomavirus diseases
    Davies, Sarah I.
    Muranski, Pawel
    CYTOTHERAPY, 2017, 19 (11) : 1302 - 1316
  • [50] Balancing Nonsense Mutation Readthrough and Toxicity of Designer Aminoglycosides for Treatment of Genetic Diseases
    Guchhait, Sandip
    Khononov, Alina
    Pienko, Tomasz
    Belakhov, Valery
    Baasov, Timor
    ACS MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 2023, 14 (06): : 794 - 801