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Volume 7, Issue 4 (Suppl)

J Biotechnol Biomater, an open access journal

ISSN: 2155-952X

Bio America 2017

October 19-20, 2017

October 19-20, 2017 | New York, USA

18

th

Biotechnology Congress

Silencing the mutant Huntington’s disease gene using CRISPR-Cas9

N Kolli

1

, M Lu

1

, P Maiti

1, 2

, J Rossignol1

and

G L Dunbar

1, 2

1

Central Michigan University, USA

2

St. Mary's of Michigan - Field Neurosciences Institute, USA

H

untington’s disease (HD) is a hereditary, fatal neurodegenerative disorder that is most prominently characterized by death

of striatal neurons, chorea, as well as cognitive and emotional dysfunction. The mutant Huntington’s gene (mHTT) contains

extra ‘CAG’ codon repeats in the exon1 from which the translated huntingtin protein (HTT) gains an elongated glutamine tract

that prevents the protein from undergoing normal post-translational modifications. In addition to its non-functional property, this

mutant protein confers a toxic gain of function, which is responsible for the pathophysiology of the HD. Although several studies

have shown behavioral sparing in the animal models of HD through the use of allogeneic and autologous stem-cell transplantation,

the existence of the mutant HTT prevents long-term functional recovery. For this reason, various gene silencing techniques, such as

RNA interference mechanisms, have been extensively studied during the past decade. However, these RNA interference strategies

are less efficient and require multiple treatments at approximately six-month intervals. As a promising alternative approach, we

propose that the most efficient way to treat HD may be to curb the production of the mutant HTT itself, through the use of the gene

editing tool, the CRISPR-Cas9 system. We have constructed two CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat)-

Cas9 (CRISPR associate protein) plasmids, among which one nicks the DNA at untranslated region upstream to the open reading

frame (uORF), and the other nicks the DNA at exon1-intron boundary. The primary goal of this study was to apply this plasmid

into mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) extracted from the bone-marrow of YAC128 mice, which carries the transgene for HD. Our

results suggested that the disruption of uORF through CRISPR-Cas9 influences the translation of mHTT negatively and, to a lesser

extent, disrupts the exon1-intron boundary, which affects the translation of the mHTT. These findings also revealed the pattern of the

nucleotide addition or deletion at the site of the DNA-nick in this model

Biography

Nivya Kolli is a doctoral candidate in the program of Neuroscience at Central Michigan University, USA. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Manipal Uni-

versity, India and has multiple research experiences, both, at national and international level. Her research seeks to understand molecular and cellular aspects related to

the pathology associated with mutant Huntingtin protein. She is currently investigating the potential of CRISPR-Cas9 mediated gene-silencing and gene-correction to treat

Huntington’s disease. She also work with the team at Field Neurosciences Institute, Michigan, to investigate the downstream autophagic pathway involved in traumatic brain

injury and the use of curcumin as a potential therapeutic treatment for Alzheimer’s disease and glioblastoma. Her expertise is in studying gene expression, gene-editing,

toxicology, cell pharmacology and pharmacokinetics.

kolli1n@cmich.edu

N Kolli et al., J Biotechnol Biomater 2017, 7:4 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2155-952X-C1-079