Science and Research

Efficient antisense inhibition reveals microRNA-155 to restrain a late-myeloid inflammatory programme in primary human phagocytes

A persisting obstacle in human immunology is that blood-derived leukocytes are notoriously difficult to manipulate at the RNA level. Therefore, our knowledge about immune-regulatory RNA-networks is largely based on tumour cell-line and rodent knockout models, which do not fully mimic human leukocyte biology. Here, we exploit straightforward cell penetrating peptide (CPP) chemistry to enable efficient loss-of-function phenotyping of regulatory RNAs in primary human blood-derived cells. The classical CPP octaarginine (R8) enabled antisense peptide-nucleic-acid (PNA) oligomer delivery into nearly 100% of human blood-derived macrophages without apparent cytotoxicity even up to micromolar concentrations. In a proof-of-principle experiment, we successfully de-repressed the global microRNA-155 regulome in primary human macrophages using a PNA-R8 oligomer, which phenocopies a CRISPR-Cas9 induced gene knockout. Interestingly, although it is often believed that fairly high concentrations (μM) are needed to achieve antisense activity, our PNA-R8 was effective at 200 nM. RNA-seq characterized microRNA-155 as a broad-acting riboregulator, feedback restraining a late myeloid differentiation-induced pro-inflammatory network, comprising MyD88-signalling and ubiquitin-proteasome components. Our results highlight the important role of the microRNA machinery in fine-control of blood-derived human phagocyte immunity and open the door for further studies on regulatory RNAs in difficult-to-transfect primary human immune cells.

  • Linden, G.
  • Janga, H.
  • Franz, M.
  • Nist, A.
  • Stiewe, T.
  • Schmeck, B.
  • Vázquez, O.
  • Schulte, L. N.

Keywords

  • Macrophage
  • Pna
  • antisense oligonucleotides
  • cell penetrating peptides
  • immunity
  • inflammation
  • mi-155
  • microRNA
  • non-coding RNA
  • octaarginine
Publication details
DOI: 10.1080/15476286.2021.1885209
Journal: RNA Biol
Pages: 1-15 
Work Type: Original
Location: UGMLC
Disease Area: PALI
Partner / Member: UMR
Access-Number: 33622174

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