Peptide nucleic acids targeted to the neurotensin receptor and administered i.p. cross the blood-brain barrier and specifically reduce gene expression

被引:114
作者
Tyler, BM
Jansen, K
McCormick, DJ
Douglas, CL
Boules, M
Stewart, JA
Zhao, LH
Lacy, B
Cusack, B
Fauq, A
Richelson, E
机构
[1] Mayo Clin Med & Educ Res, Lab Neuropsychopharmacol, Jacksonville, FL 32224 USA
[2] Mayo Clin Med & Educ Res, Neurochem Lab, Jacksonville, FL 32224 USA
[3] Mayo Clin Med & Educ Res, Dept Biochem & Mol Biol, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1073/pnas.96.12.7053
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Intraperitoneal injection of an unmodified antisense peptide nucleic acid (PNA) complementary to mRNA of the rat neurotensin (NT) receptor (NTR1) was demonstrated by a gel shift assay to be present in brain, thus indicating that the PNA had in fact crossed the blood-brain barrier. An i.p. injection of this antisense PNA specifically inhibited the hypothermic and antinociceptive activities of NT microinjected into brain. These results were associated with a reduction in binding sites for NT both in brain and the small intestine. Additionally, the sense-NTR1 PNA, targeted to DNA, microinjected directly into the brain specifically reduced mRNA levels by 50% and caused a loss of response to NT, To demonstrate the specificity of changes in behavioral, binding, and mRNA studies, animals treated with NTR1 PNA were tested for behavioral responses to morphine and their mu receptor levels were determined. Both were found to be unaffected in these NTR1 PNA-treated animals. The effects of both the antisense and sense PNAs were completely reversible. This work provides evidence that any antisense strategy targeted to brain proteins can work through i.p. delivery by crossing the normal blood-brain barrier. Equally important was that an antigene strategy, the sense PNA, was shown in vivo to be a potentially effective therapeutic treatment.
引用
收藏
页码:7053 / 7058
页数:6
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   STRUCTURE-ANTINOCICEPTIVE ACTIVITY OF NEUROTENSIN AND SOME NOVEL ANALOGS IN THE PERIAQUEDUCTAL GRAY REGION OF THE BRAIN-STEM [J].
ALRODHAN, NRF ;
RICHELSON, E ;
GILBERT, JA ;
MCCORMICK, DJ ;
KANBA, KS ;
PFENNING, MA ;
NELSON, A ;
LARSON, EW ;
YAKSH, TL .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1991, 557 (1-2) :227-235
[2]   HYPOTHERMIA AND INTOLERANCE TO COLD INDUCED BY INTRACISTERNAL ADMINISTRATION OF HYPOTHALAMIC PEPTIDE NEUROTENSIN [J].
BISSETTE, G ;
NEMEROFF, CB ;
LOOSEN, PT ;
PRANGE, AJ ;
LIPTON, MA .
NATURE, 1976, 262 (5569) :607-609
[3]   A good antisense molecule is hard to find [J].
Branch, AD .
TRENDS IN BIOCHEMICAL SCIENCES, 1998, 23 (02) :45-50
[4]  
CARRAWAY R, 1975, J BIOL CHEM, V250, P1907
[5]   Molecular cloning of a levocabastine-sensitive neurotensin binding site [J].
Chalon, P ;
Vita, N ;
Kaghad, M ;
Guillemot, M ;
Bonnin, J ;
Delpech, B ;
LeFur, G ;
Ferrara, P ;
Caput, D .
FEBS LETTERS, 1996, 386 (2-3) :91-94
[6]   Peptide nucleic acids: Expanding the scope of nucleic acid recognition [J].
Corey, DR .
TRENDS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, 1997, 15 (06) :224-229
[7]  
Crooke ST, 1996, J PHARMACOL EXP THER, V277, P923
[8]   STABILITY OF PEPTIDE NUCLEIC-ACIDS IN HUMAN SERUM AND CELLULAR-EXTRACTS [J].
DEMIDOV, VV ;
POTAMAN, VN ;
FRANKKAMENETSKII, MD ;
EGHOLM, M ;
BUCHARD, O ;
SONNICHSEN, SH ;
NIELSEN, PE .
BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 1994, 48 (06) :1310-1313
[9]   SPECIFIC BINDING OF TRITIATED NEUROTENSIN TO RAT-BRAIN MEMBRANES - CHARACTERIZATION AND REGIONAL DISTRIBUTION [J].
GOEDERT, M ;
PITTAWAY, K ;
WILLIAMS, BJ ;
EMSON, PC .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1984, 304 (01) :71-81
[10]   ANTISENSE AND ANTIGENE PROPERTIES OF PEPTIDE NUCLEIC-ACIDS [J].
HANVEY, JC ;
PEFFER, NJ ;
BISI, JE ;
THOMSON, SA ;
CADILLA, R ;
JOSEY, JA ;
RICCA, DJ ;
HASSMAN, CF ;
BONHAM, MA ;
AU, KG ;
CARTER, SG ;
BRUCKENSTEIN, DA ;
BOYD, AL ;
NOBLE, SA ;
BABISS, LE .
SCIENCE, 1992, 258 (5087) :1481-1485