Nature Communications (Mar 2022)

An orally available, brain penetrant, small molecule lowers huntingtin levels by enhancing pseudoexon inclusion

  • Caroline Gubser Keller,
  • Youngah Shin,
  • Alex Mas Monteys,
  • Nicole Renaud,
  • Martin Beibel,
  • Natalia Teider,
  • Thomas Peters,
  • Thomas Faller,
  • Sophie St-Cyr,
  • Judith Knehr,
  • Guglielmo Roma,
  • Alejandro Reyes,
  • Marc Hild,
  • Dmitriy Lukashev,
  • Diethilde Theil,
  • Natalie Dales,
  • Jang-Ho Cha,
  • Beth Borowsky,
  • Ricardo Dolmetsch,
  • Beverly L. Davidson,
  • Rajeev Sivasankaran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28653-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Huntington’s disease (HD) results from the abnormal expansion of CAG repeats in exon 1 of the HTT gene. Here, the authors show that orally available, brain penetrant molecule branaplam lowers HTT transcript by promoting inclusion of a poison exon or pseudoexon.