JCI Insight (Dec 2022)

Antisense oligonucleotide therapy for KCNT1 encephalopathy

  • Lisseth Estefania Burbano,
  • Melody Li,
  • Nikola Jancovski,
  • Paymaan Jafar-Nejad,
  • Kay Richards,
  • Alicia Sedo,
  • Armand Soriano,
  • Ben Rollo,
  • Linghan Jia,
  • Elena V. Gazina,
  • Sandra Piltz,
  • Fatwa Adikusuma,
  • Paul Q. Thomas,
  • Helen Kopsidas,
  • Frank Rigo,
  • Christopher A. Reid,
  • Snezana Maljevic,
  • Steven Petrou

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 23

Abstract

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Developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs) are characterized by pharmaco-resistant seizures with concomitant intellectual disability. Epilepsy of infancy with migrating focal seizures (EIMFS) is one of the most severe of these syndromes. De novo variants in ion channels, including gain-of-function variants in KCNT1, which encodes for sodium activated potassium channel protein KNa1.1, have been found to play a major role in the etiology of EIMFS. Here, we test a potential precision therapeutic approach in KCNT1-associated DEE using a gene-silencing antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) approach. We generated a mouse model carrying the KCNT1 p.P924L pathogenic variant; only the homozygous animals presented with the frequent, debilitating seizures and developmental compromise that are seen in patients. After a single intracerebroventricular bolus injection of a Kcnt1 gapmer ASO in symptomatic mice at postnatal day 40, seizure frequency was significantly reduced, behavioral abnormalities improved, and overall survival was extended compared with mice treated with a control ASO (nonhybridizing sequence). ASO administration at neonatal age was also well tolerated and effective in controlling seizures and extending the life span of treated animals. The data presented here provide proof of concept for ASO-based gene silencing as a promising therapeutic approach in KCNT1-associated epilepsies.

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