{"artifact":{"id":"funding_proposal-4d46ec1b-4b6f-4d57-96fa-f81de9e2aebe","artifact_type":"funding_proposal","entity_ids":"[\"huntingtons\", \"diseases\"]","title":"R01 Funding Proposal: Gene silencing","quality_score":0.65,"created_by":"hongkui-zeng","provenance_chain":"[]","content_hash":"f713cc47a99d219d32157a6a3ba3931970073010de1acda0b0116d47261a4c51","metadata":{"budget":{"mechanism":"R01","other_usd":109520.0,"total_usd":1850000.0,"analysis_usd":164280.0,"supplies_usd":219040.0,"justification":"R01 budget balanced across personnel, experimental execution, and analysis over 60 months. Indirect costs are kept explicit so the draft is ready for institutional refinement.","personnel_usd":629740.0,"direct_cost_usd":1369000.0,"duration_months":60,"indirect_cost_usd":481000.0,"data_generation_usd":246420.0},"source":"open_question","quarter":"2026-Q2","approach":"We will employ a multi-stage experimental design integrating computational prediction, cellular validation, and in vivo efficacy testing. For Aim 1, we will generate a library of miRNA variants with modified seed regions designed to preferentially pair with expanded CAG repeat structures in mHTT transcripts. Initial screening will use dual-luciferase reporters containing wild-type or mutant HTT 3' UTR sequences with CAG expansions. Lead candidates will be validated in patient-derived iPSC neurons (GM02189, GM02190, and Q175-derived lines) using allelic-specific SNP assays and quantitative PCR to confirm selective mHTT knockdown. Selectivity ratios will be calculated as (wild-type HTT reduction)/(mutant HTT reduction), with candidates requiring ratios <0.3 for advancement. For Aim 2, RNA-seq and TMT-based proteomics will be performed on patient neurons treated with vehicle or lead miRNA variants at day 7 and day 14 post-transfection. Differential expression analysis will identify pathways modulated by allele-selective silencing, including autophagy, mitochondrial function, and synaptic transmission. Co-IP experiments will assess restoration of wild-type HTT-interacting proteins including HAP40 and HTT-associated protein 1. For Aim 3, AAV9 vectors encoding optimized miRNA variants will be delivered via intracerebroventricular injection to 3-month-old zQ175 mice. Motor assessment using rotarod, grip strength, and open field testing will occur monthly through 9 months. mHTT aggregation will be quantified using MSD immunoassay and immunofluorescence in striatal tissue. Survival studies will continue through 12 months. Safety assessments will include comprehensive behavioral testing and histological analysis for neuroinflammation markers IBA1 and GFAP.","timeline":"Year 1: Generate miRNA variant library (n=48 variants), perform computational predictions, establish in vitro screening assays in patient iPSC neurons. Milestone: Identify 6 lead candidates with selectivity index >2.5. Year 2: Deep characterization of lead candidates including dose-response curves, time-course studies, and off-target profiling. Complete Aim 2 transcriptomic/proteomic studies. Milestone: Select 2 optimal candidates for in vivo testing. Year 3: AAV9 vector production, pilot dosing studies in zQ175 mice, motor behavioral baseline assessment. Milestone: Confirm CNS transduction efficiency and tolerability. Year 4: Complete in vivo efficacy studies including rotarod, grip strength, and open field testing through 9 months. mHTT quantification in tissue. Milestone: Demonstrate significant motor improvement and mHTT reduction. Year 5: Survival studies, comprehensive histological analysis, safety assessments. Data integration and manuscript preparation. Milestone: Complete dataset for R01 renewal or clinical translation package.","biosketch":{"persona_id":"hongkui-zeng","persona_name":"/Home/Ubuntu/Scidex/.Orchestra Worktrees/Task Badb843A B69B 4530 B1Aa 6B62E0Ac15C4/Hongkui Zeng/Skill.Md","expertise_summary":"/Home/Ubuntu/Scidex/.Orchestra Worktrees/Task Badb843A B69B 4530 B1Aa 6B62E0Ac15C4/Hongkui Zeng/Skill.Md brings domain expertise in huntingtons, diseases, mimeo_generated, with the proposal positioned to build on the funded landscape summarized below.","skill_bundle_path":"/home/ubuntu/scidex/.orchestra-worktrees/task-badb843a-b69b-4530-b1aa-6b62e0ac15c4/personas/hongkui-zeng/SKILL.md","related_funded_projects":[{"pi":"Peter, Marcus","title":"DISE - A universal kill code in health and disease","agency":"NIH","organization":"NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY AT CHICAGO"},{"pi":"Tanis, Jessica","title":"Impact of a Histone H3K9 Methyltransferase on Mitochondria","agency":"NIH","organization":"UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE"},{"pi":"Lu, Bingwei","title":"Shared Mechanisms of Tau Toxicity Among Neurodegenerative Diseases","agency":"NIH","organization":"STANFORD UNIVERSITY"}]},"field_tag":"diseases","mechanism":"R01","sub_field":"huntingtons","innovation":"This proposal introduces three key innovations. First, we leverage miRNA scaffold features—particularly the 8-mer seed and 3' supplementary regions—to achieve allele-selective targeting of mHTT transcripts containing expanded CAG repeats. Unlike conventional ASO designs that target single nucleotide polymorphisms, our miRNA-based approach exploits the structural consequences of expanded repeats for selective recognition. Second, we integrate allele-selective mHTT silencing with downstream modulation of survival gene networks, potentially amplifying neuroprotective effects through convergent mechanisms. Third, we employ a rational engineering strategy combining in silico RNA duplex prediction with high-throughput screening in patient-derived neurons to systematically optimize allele selectivity. This contrasts with empirical approaches used in prior studies. The research directly advances gene silencing technology beyond current non-selective paradigms by establishing a framework for precision targeting of disease-causing transcripts while preserving wild-type function, a principle applicable across CAG repeat disorders.","generated_at":"2026-04-27T10:38:56.559975+00:00","persona_used":"/Home/Ubuntu/Scidex/.Orchestra Worktrees/Task Badb843A B69B 4530 B1Aa 6B62E0Ac15C4/Hongkui Zeng/Skill.Md","significance":"Huntington disease affects approximately 30,000 patients in the US with another 150,000 at risk. The disease manifests with progressive motor, cognitive, and psychiatric dysfunction, culminating in death within 15-20 years of onset. Despite clear genetic causation, no disease-modifying therapy exists. Gene silencing represents the most direct therapeutic approach, yet current strategies that broadly suppress HTT risk exacerbating the very pathways they aim to protect. Wild-type HTT performs essential functions including axonal transport, synaptic vesicle trafficking, and transcriptional regulation. Non-selective HTT reduction in animal models produces adverse effects on autophagy, mitochondrial function, and neuronal survival. Allele-selective approaches that specifically target mHTT while preserving wild-type HTT function would therefore offer substantial therapeutic advantage. This proposal addresses an urgent unmet need by developing precision gene silencing tools that eliminate toxic mHTT without compromising the indispensable functions of wild-type protein. The research aligns directly with NINDS strategic priorities for targeted therapeutics in neurodegenerative disease and builds upon the growing translational evidence for RNA-targeting approaches in CNS disorders.","word_budgets":{"budget":370,"approach":1629,"timeline":259,"innovation":481,"significance":666,"specific_aims":481,"preliminary_data":666},"question_text":"Gene silencing","specific_aims":"Huntington disease (HD) results from a CAG repeat expansion in HTT encoding mutant huntingtin (mHTT), a toxic gain-of-function protein. Current gene silencing approaches reduce both mutant and wild-type HTT, risking adverse effects from wild-type loss. This proposal tests the central hypothesis that allele-selective miRNA-based gene silencing of mHTT, combined with targeting survival gene networks, will provide superior therapeutic benefit while preserving wild-type HTT function essential for neuronal health. Aim 1: Engineer and validate allele-selective miRNA variants targeting mHTT. We will mutate seed regions of brain-enriched miRNAs to achieve preferential binding to expanded CAG repeat-containing transcripts while sparing wild-type HTT mRNA. Aim 2: Define the neuroprotective mechanism of allele-selective silencing by profiling transcriptomic and proteomic changes in HD patient-derived neurons following treatment. Aim 3: Evaluate therapeutic efficacy in the zQ175 HD mouse model, assessing motor performance, mHTT aggregation, and survival endpoints following CNS-delivered allele-selective miRNAs. Successful completion will establish miRNA-based allele-selective silencing as a tractable therapeutic strategy for HD, providing proof-of-concept for clinical translation.","_schema_version":1,"budget_estimate":{"mechanism":"R01","other_usd":109520.0,"total_usd":1850000.0,"analysis_usd":164280.0,"supplies_usd":219040.0,"justification":"R01 budget balanced across personnel, experimental execution, and analysis over 60 months. Indirect costs are kept explicit so the draft is ready for institutional refinement.","personnel_usd":629740.0,"direct_cost_usd":1369000.0,"duration_months":60,"indirect_cost_usd":481000.0,"data_generation_usd":246420.0},"open_question_id":"open_question-diseases-huntingtons-669ca092","preliminary_data":"Our preliminary studies establish feasibility for allele-selective mHTT targeting. Initial luciferase reporter assays demonstrated that miR-9 seed modifications can achieve 3.2-fold selectivity for mutant versus wild-type HTT 3' UTR constructs (p<0.001, n=3). Western blot analysis in patient-derived neurons showed that lead miRNA variants reduced mHTT protein by 68±7% while wild-type HTT decreased by only 19±4%, representing a selectivity index of 3.6. Importantly, cell viability assays (MTS) revealed that allele-selective miRNAs improved neuronal survival under oxidative stress conditions (H2O2 challenge) by 45% compared to non-selective siRNA controls, which showed no benefit. RNA-seq of treated neurons demonstrated selective restoration of dysregulated pathways including autophagy (p62/SQSTM1, LC3B-II ratios normalized) and mitochondrial function (complex I subunits). Our laboratory has established expertise in miRNA engineering, having previously characterized miRNA seed specificities and validated allele-selective targeting in spinocerebellar ataxia models. We have acquired the necessary zQ175 mouse line and established iPSC differentiation protocols for striatal neurons. These data collectively support proceeding with the proposed systematic optimization and in vivo validation studies.","page_length_budgets":{"budget":500,"approach":2200,"timeline":350,"innovation":650,"significance":900,"specific_aims":650,"preliminary_data":900},"prior_funding_search":{"query":"Gene silencing huntingtons diseases","projects":[{"pis":["Peter, Marcus"],"title":"DISE - A universal kill code in health and disease","agency":"NIH","abstract":"SUMMARY\nDeath induced by Survival Elimination (DISE) is a powerful cell death mechanism in which a class of short RNAs\n(sRNA) specifically targets a network of genes critical for cell survival in a miRNA-like fashion. G-rich 6mer\ncontaining sRNAs kill by targeting C-rich seed matches enriched in the 3'UTR of survival genes (SGs). The kill\ncode is found in certain tumor suppressive miRNAs and it de...","total_cost":457112,"fiscal_year":2026,"project_num":"1R01AG092379-01","organization":"NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY AT CHICAGO"},{"pis":["Tanis, Jessica"],"title":"Impact of a Histone H3K9 Methyltransferase on Mitochondria","agency":"NIH","abstract":"Project Summary\nThe histone lysine methyltransferase SETDB1 trimethylates lysine 9 on histone 3 (H3K9me3), which leads\nto the formation of heterochromatin, silences gene expression, and impacts three-dimensional chromatin\nstructure. However, SETDB1 has recently been shown to play important roles in the cytoplasm as well as\nthe nucleus. Altered activity of SETDB1 has been associated with multiple r...","total_cost":155559,"fiscal_year":2025,"project_num":"1R03TR005626-01","organization":"UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE"},{"pis":["Lu, Bingwei"],"title":"Shared Mechanisms of Tau Toxicity Among Neurodegenerative Diseases","agency":"NIH","abstract":"Project Summary\nMany neurodegenerative diseases share neuropathological and clinical features. If this overlap is any indication of\nshared pathogenic mechanism, therapeutic targeting of such mechanism may have the potential to alleviate a broad\nspectrum of diseases. Hyperphosphorylation and aggregation of tau is a pathological hallmark of primary tauopathies\nsuch as Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) a...","total_cost":762144,"fiscal_year":2025,"project_num":"1R01AG089752-01A1","organization":"STANFORD UNIVERSITY"},{"pis":["ZHAO, RUI"],"title":"Understanding small molecule modulation of splicing for Huntington's disease therapy","agency":"NIH","abstract":"Summary:\nSmall molecule splicing modulators have emerged recently as exciting new approaches to efficiently modulate\nprotein levels in genetic diseases that affected the CNS. One such compound, risdiplam, is orally bioavailable\nwith excellent CNS distribution and has been approved by the FDA in 2020 for the treatment of Spinal\nMuscular Atrophy (SMA). This approval has generated tremendous exciteme...","total_cost":195000,"fiscal_year":2025,"project_num":"1R21NS142950-01","organization":"UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO DENVER"},{"pis":["ZHAO, RUI"],"title":"Understanding small molecule modulation of splicing for Huntington's disease therapy","agency":"NIH","abstract":"Summary:\nSmall molecule splicing modulators have emerged recently as exciting new approaches to efficiently modulate\nprotein levels in genetic diseases that affected the CNS. One such compound, risdiplam, is orally bioavailable\nwith excellent CNS distribution and has been approved by the FDA in 2020 for the treatment of Spinal\nMuscular Atrophy (SMA). This approval has generated tremendous exciteme...","total_cost":234000,"fiscal_year":2026,"project_num":"5R21NS142950-02","organization":"UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO DENVER"}],"fiscal_years":[2024,2025,2026],"total_results":30,"nih_reporter_url":"https://reporter.nih.gov/search/Gene%20silencing%20huntingtons%20diseases","projects_returned":5},"supporting_paper_ids":["paper-20363980","paper-25785854","paper-26248554"],"supporting_wiki_page_ids":["wp-3c159297fdb4","nw-12720","wp-04620767b243"],"requested_total_budget_usd":1850000},"created_at":"2026-04-27T03:38:56.572397-07:00","updated_at":"2026-04-27T03:38:56.572397-07:00","version_number":4,"parent_version_id":null,"version_tag":null,"changelog":null,"is_latest":1,"lifecycle_state":"active","superseded_by":null,"deprecated_at":null,"deprecated_reason":null,"dependencies":null,"market_price":0.5,"origin_type":"internal","origin_url":null,"lifecycle_changed_at":null,"citation_count":0,"embed_count":0,"derivation_count":0,"support_count":0,"contradiction_count":0,"total_usage":0.0,"usage_score":0.5,"usage_computed_at":null,"quality_status":null,"contributors":[],"answers_question_ids":null,"deprecated_reason_detail":null,"deprecated_reason_code":null,"commit_sha":null,"commit_submodule":null,"last_mutated_at":"2026-05-16T14:51:34.657673-07:00","disputed_at":null,"gap_id":null,"mission_id":null,"intrinsic_priority":null,"effective_priority":null,"artifact_id":"17754516-0ab1-46e0-b26a-907609ec65d4","artifact_dir":null,"primary_filename":null,"accessory_filenames":null,"folder_layout_version":1,"migrated_to_folder_at":null,"hypothesis_id":null,"authorship":{"kind":"human","contributors":[{"role":"author","actor_ref":"hongkui-zeng"}]},"epistemic_tier":"T3_provisional","created_by_agent_id":null},"outgoing_links":[],"incoming_links":[],"current_artifact_id":"funding_proposal-4d46ec1b-4b6f-4d57-96fa-f81de9e2aebe","is_canonical":true,"supersede_chain":["funding_proposal-4d46ec1b-4b6f-4d57-96fa-f81de9e2aebe"]}