Absolute quantification of mammalian microRNAs for therapeutic RNA cleavage and detargeting

Carolyn Kraus, Jiayi Wang, Haiying Zheng, Jennifer Broderick, Nandagopal Ajaykumar, Mina Zamani, Mengqi Yang, Katharine Cecchini, Shun Qing Liang, Olena Kolumba, Kathryn Chase, Jooyoung Lee, Wen Xue, Erik J. Sontheimer, Ildar Gainetdinov

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small regulatory RNAs that destabilize partially complementary transcripts and cleave perfectly paired targets. miRNAs are often expressed in a specific tissue, allowing miRNA-directed cleavage to be used to prevent genome editing or gene replacement therapy in unintended cell types, a strategy called detargeting. miRNA intracellular concentration influences the potency of gene silencing, yet the absolute steady-state levels of just a few miRNAs have been determined in mammalian tissues. Here, we report the absolute abundance of miRNAs in 14 human and mouse cell lines and 17 mouse tissues, including eight brain regions. Our experiments in human cultured cells demonstrate that both miRNA and target levels influence efficacy of cleavage of fully complementary transcripts. We report the miRNA concentration required for productive cleavage of highly expressed transcripts and identify mouse miRNAs that reach this threshold in vivo.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1081-1090
Number of pages10
JournalRNA
Volume31
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Kraus et al.

Keywords

  • absolute abundance
  • detargeting
  • microRNA
  • tissue-specific expression

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