Deep screening of proximal and distal splicing-regulatory elements in a native sequence context

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2023 Aug 21:2023.08.21.554109. doi: 10.1101/2023.08.21.554109.

Abstract

Pre-mRNA splicing, a key process in gene expression, can be therapeutically modulated using various drug modalities, including antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs). However, determining promising targets is impeded by the challenge of systematically mapping splicing-regulatory elements (SREs) in their native sequence context. Here, we use the catalytically dead CRISPR-RfxCas13d RNA-targeting system (dCas13d/gRNA) as a programmable platform to bind SREs and modulate splicing by competing against endogenous splicing factors. SpliceRUSH, a high-throughput screening method, was developed to map SREs in any gene of interest using a lentivirus gRNA library that tiles the genetic region, including distal intronic sequences. When applied to SMN2, a therapeutic target for spinal muscular atrophy, SpliceRUSH robustly identified not only known SREs, but also a novel distal intronic splicing enhancer, which can be targeted to alter exon 7 splicing using either dCas13d/gRNA or ASOs. This technology enables a deeper understanding of splicing regulation with applications for RNA-based drug discovery.

Keywords: SMN2; alternative splicing; antisense oligonucleotides (ASO); dCas13d/guide RNA; high-throughput screen; splicing-regulatory elements (SREs).

Publication types

  • Preprint