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Targeting the RNA Repeat Expansion that Causes Myotonic Dystrophy Type 2
Microsatellite disorders are a class of >40 diseases caused when DNA building blocks, or nucleotides, are repeated too many times in a gene, also known as repeat expansions. Herein, we have proposed a comprehensive program to target the root cause of the microsatellite disorder myotonic dystrophy type 2 (DM2). The major cause of toxicity and symptoms occurs when the gene that causes DM2 is transcribed into a biomolecule known as RNA. Interestingly, during this transcription process, the RNA repeat expansion adopts a 3-dimensional structure that looks like a bobby pin, or a hairpin. The bumps in the bobby pin are called loops, and these loops are unique to each RNA. This new RNA fold, not present in the healthy RNA, is toxic, gaining an aberrant function that causes disease. Over more than a decade, the Disney Laboratory has designed drug-like compounds that bind and deactivate RNA repeat expansion disorders in patient-derived cells and mouse models. Indeed, we have developed highly potent inhibitors of toxicity caused by the DM2 RNA as well as other repeat expansionsusing various innovative approaches. Here, we have proposed a comprehensive program to develop drugs that potently and specifically deactivate the toxic DM2 RNA as a therapeutic strategy, an unmet, urgent medical need for this neuromuscular disorder, which currently lack effective treatments.
Grantee: Matthew Disney, Ph.D.
Grant type: Research Grant
Award total: $300,000.00
Institution: University of Florida
Country: United States