Insufficient efficacy and͞or specificity of antisense oligonucleotides limit their in vivo usefulness. We demonstrate here that a highaffinity DNA analog, locked nucleic acid (LNA), confers several desired properties to antisense agents. Unlike DNA, LNA͞DNA copolymers were not degraded readily in blood serum and cell extracts. However, like DNA, the LNA͞DNA copolymers were capable of activating RNase H, an important antisense mechanism of action. In contrast to phosphorothioate-containing oligonucleotides, isosequential LNA analogs did not cause detectable toxic reactions in rat brain. LNA͞DNA copolymers exhibited potent antisense activity on assay systems as disparate as a G-protein-coupled receptor in living rat brain and an Escherichia coli reporter gene. LNA-containing oligonucleotides will likely be useful for many antisense applications.A ntisense oligonucleotides designed according to straightforward base-pairing rules have been useful in functional genomics efforts, and there also has been recent clinical progress in developing antisense drugs (1-5). The key objective in the field, however, remains the identification of oligonucleotide analogs that provide the possibility to achieve high in vivo efficacy in the absence of significant toxicity (1-3).To date, all human antisense studies, as well as the vast majority of studies on other species, have relied on the use of phosphorothioate DNA analogs (where one nonbridging phosphate oxygen has been replaced). Although phosphorothioates are markedly more resistant to degrading enzymes than DNA, their DNA-binding capacity (relating to potency when used as antisense agents) is low, and they are well known to cause nonspecific protein binding, largely because of their polyanionic nature. The latter phenomenon contributes to a toxicity profile that limits many applications (6, 7). For example, when injected into the brain, phosphorothioates can cause severe tissue damage, especially with repeated or prolonged administration schedules (7,8). Such phosphorothioate-induced toxic reactions are thought to be reduced but not absent in second-generation antisense agents, like mixed backbone oligonucleotides (containing phosphorothioates in combination with oligodeoxyribonucleotides or oligoribonucleotides) (9).Interestingly, conformational restriction has been successfully applied in recent years to the design of high-affinity oligonucleotides. Several analogs containing bi-and tricyclic carbohydrate moieties have displayed enhanced duplex stability (10-20) and most notably so locked nucleic acids (LNA) (Fig. 1). LNA induces unprecedented increases in the thermal stability (melting temperature, T m ) of duplexes toward complementary DNA and RNA (⌬T m ͞LNA monomer ϭ ϩ 3 to ϩ 11°C compared with the corresponding DNA reference). By virtue of their bicyclic structure, the furanose ring of the LNA monomers is locked in a 3Ј-endo conformation, thus structurally mimicking the standard RNA monomers. Moreover, LNA͞LNA duplex formation has been shown to constitute the most stable...
Effects of transplantable rat insulinomas (IN) and glucagonomas (GLU) on the endogenous pancreas were analyzed using morphometry, immunocytochemistry, in situ hybridization, and staining for apoptotic cells. Hyperinsulinemia (IN-rats) and hyper-GLP-1/glucagonemia (GLU-rats) were both associated with marked islet atrophy (67 and 76% of control average planimetrical islet area, respectively). Selective islet B cell inhibition of proinsulin (I and II) genes as well as of expression of the insulin gene transcription factor, IPF1/STF1, was found in IN-rats. Moreover, these islets were characterized by significant B cells apoptosis in the absence of infiltrating lymphocytes. In GLU-rats selective islet A cell inhibition was observed at the level of glucagon mRNA. These islets contained small, highly condensed but clearly active B cells with prominent IPF1/STF1-positive nuclei, surrounded by densely packed glucagon-negative cells with reduced cytoplasm. Furthermore, an active apoptotic process was found exclusively in the exocrine pancreas of GLU-rats. Thus, in IN-rats, islet B cell mass reduction is distinguished by non-immune-mediated programmed cell death, while GLU-rats exhibit A cell mass reduction by cytoplasmic retraction and selective exocrine apoptosis. (J. Clin. Invest. 1995. 96:2227-2235
SummaryTo elucidate the mechanisms involved in anti-oestrogen resistance, two human breast cancer cell lines MCF-7 and the ICI 182780-resistant cell line, MCF-7/182 R -6, have been compared with regard to oestrogen receptor (ER) expression, ER function, ER regulation, growth requirements and differentially expressed gene products. MCF-7/182 R -6 cells express a reduced level of ER protein. The ER protein is functional with respect to binding of oestradiol and the anti-oestrogens tamoxifen, 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen and ICI 182780, whereas expression and oestrogen induction of the progesterone receptor is lost in MCF-7/182 R -6 cells. The ER protein and the ER mRNA are regulated similarly in the two cell lines when subjected to treatment with oestradiol or ICI 182780. Oestradiol down-regulates ER mRNA and ER protein expression. ICI 182780 has no initial effect on ER mRNA expression whereas the ER protein level decreases rapidly in cells treated with ICI 182780, indicating a severely decreased stability of the ER protein when bound to ICI 182780. In vitro growth experiments revealed that the ICI 182780-resistant cell line had evolved to an oestradiol-independent phenotype, able to grow with close to maximal growth rate both in the absence of oestradiol and in the presence of ICI 182780. Comparison of gene expression between the two cell lines revealed relatively few differences, indicating that a limited number of changes is involved in the development of anti-oestrogen resistance. Identification of the differentially expressed gene products are currently in progress.
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