Nature Communications (Oct 2023)

RNA-based translation activators for targeted gene upregulation

  • Yang Cao,
  • Huachun Liu,
  • Shannon S. Lu,
  • Krysten A. Jones,
  • Anitha P. Govind,
  • Okunola Jeyifous,
  • Christine Q. Simmons,
  • Negar Tabatabaei,
  • William N. Green,
  • Jimmy. L. Holder,
  • Soroush Tahmasebi,
  • Alfred L. George,
  • Bryan C. Dickinson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42252-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Technologies capable of programmable translation activation offer strategies to develop therapeutics for diseases caused by insufficient gene expression. Here, we present “translation-activating RNAs” (taRNAs), a bifunctional RNA-based molecular technology that binds to a specific mRNA of interest and directly upregulates its translation. taRNAs are constructed from a variety of viral or mammalian RNA internal ribosome entry sites (IRESs) and upregulate translation for a suite of target mRNAs. We minimize the taRNA scaffold to 94 nucleotides, identify two translation initiation factor proteins responsible for taRNA activity, and validate the technology by amplifying SYNGAP1 expression, a haploinsufficiency disease target, in patient-derived cells. Finally, taRNAs are suitable for delivery as RNA molecules by lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) to cell lines, primary neurons, and mouse liver in vivo. taRNAs provide a general and compact nucleic acid-based technology to upregulate protein production from endogenous mRNAs, and may open up possibilities for therapeutic RNA research.