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Institution

Regulus Therapeutics

CompanySan Diego, California, United States
About: Regulus Therapeutics is a company organization based out in San Diego, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: microRNA & Gene silencing. The organization has 122 authors who have published 117 publications receiving 17110 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
20 Oct 2011-Nature
TL;DR: It is shown in African green monkeys that systemic delivery of an anti-miRNA oligonucleotide that targets both miR-33a and miR/b increased hepatic expression of ABCA1 and induced a sustained increase in plasma HDL levels over 12 weeks, establishing a promising therapeutic strategy to raise plasma HDL and lower VLDL triglyceride levels for the treatment of dyslipidaemias that increase cardiovascular disease risk.
Abstract: Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of mortality in westernized countries, despite optimum medical therapy to reduce the levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-associated cholesterol. The pursuit of novel therapies to target the residual risk has focused on raising the levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-associated cholesterol in order to exploit its atheroprotective effects. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have emerged as important post-transcriptional regulators of lipid metabolism and are thus a new class of target for therapeutic intervention. MicroRNA-33a and microRNA-33b (miR-33a/b) are intronic miRNAs whose encoding regions are embedded in the sterol-response-element-binding protein genes SREBF2 and SREBF1 (refs 3-5), respectively. These miRNAs repress expression of the cholesterol transporter ABCA1, which is a key regulator of HDL biogenesis. Recent studies in mice suggest that antagonizing miR-33a may be an effective strategy for raising plasma HDL levels and providing protection against atherosclerosis; however, extrapolating these findings to humans is complicated by the fact that mice lack miR-33b, which is present only in the SREBF1 gene of medium and large mammals. Here we show in African green monkeys that systemic delivery of an anti-miRNA oligonucleotide that targets both miR-33a and miR-33b increased hepatic expression of ABCA1 and induced a sustained increase in plasma HDL levels over 12 weeks. Notably, miR-33 antagonism in this non-human primate model also increased the expression of miR-33 target genes involved in fatty acid oxidation (CROT, CPT1A, HADHB and PRKAA1) and reduced the expression of genes involved in fatty acid synthesis (SREBF1, FASN, ACLY and ACACA), resulting in a marked suppression of the plasma levels of very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL)-associated triglycerides, a finding that has not previously been observed in mice. These data establish, in a model that is highly relevant to humans, that pharmacological inhibition of miR-33a and miR-33b is a promising therapeutic strategy to raise plasma HDL and lower VLDL triglyceride levels for the treatment of dyslipidaemias that increase cardiovascular disease risk.

613 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The finding that miR-21 is a major player in kidney fibrosis suggests that drugs that inhibit miR -21, like the complementary oligonucleotides used in this study, might prove to be useful therapies in humans.
Abstract: Scarring of the kidney is a major public health concern, directly promoting loss of kidney function. To understand the role of microRNA (miRNA) in the progression of kidney scarring in response to injury, we investigated changes in miRNA expression in two kidney fibrosis models and identified 24 commonly up-regulated miRNAs. Among them, miR-21 was highly elevated in both animal models and in human transplanted kidneys with nephropathy. Deletion of miR-21 in mice resulted in no overt abnormality. However, miR-21 −/− mice suffered far less interstitial fibrosis in response to kidney injury, a phenotype duplicated in wild-type mice treated with anti–miR-21 oligonucleotides. Global derepression of miR-21 target mRNAs was readily detectable in miR-21 −/− kidneys after injury. Analysis of gene expression profiles up-regulated in the absence of miR-21 identified groups of genes involved in metabolic pathways, including the lipid metabolism pathway regulated by peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor-α (Pparα), a direct miR-21 target. Overexpression of Pparα prevented ureteral obstruction–induced injury and fibrosis. Pparα deficiency abrogated the antifibrotic effect of anti–miR-21 oligonucleotides. miR-21 also regulated the redox metabolic pathway. The mitochondrial inhibitor of reactive oxygen species generation Mpv17l was repressed by miR-21, correlating closely with enhanced oxidative kidney damage. These studies demonstrate that miR-21 contributes to fibrogenesis and epithelial injury in the kidney in two mouse models and is a candidate target for antifibrotic therapies.

482 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a small regulatory microRNA, miR-296, has a major role in angiogenesis by directly targeting the hepatocyte growth factor-regulated tyrosine kinase substrate (HGS) mRNA, leading to decreased levels of HGS and thereby reducing HGS-mediated degradation of the growth factor receptors VEGFR2 and PDGFRbeta.

440 citations

Patent
30 Dec 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, compositions and methods for modulating the expression and function of small non-coding RNAs are provided. But the compositions are targeted to small non coding RNAs, and methods of using these compounds for modulation of small NNAs as well as downstream targets of these RNAs and for diagnosis and treatment of disease associated with small NNs.
Abstract: Compounds, compositions and methods are provided for modulating the expression and function of small non-coding RNAs. The compositions comprise oligomeric compounds, targeted to small non-coding RNAs. Methods of using these compounds for modulation of small non-coding RNAs as well as downstream targets of these RNAs and for diagnosis and treatment of disease associated with small non-coding RNAs are also provided.

432 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Genetic ablation of NF-κB p50 suppresses the myeloproliferation, showing that dysregulation of NF -κB is responsible for the myELoproliferative disease.
Abstract: MicroRNA miR-146a has been implicated as a negative feedback regulator of NF-κB activation. Knockout of the miR-146a gene in C57BL/6 mice leads to histologically and immunophenotypically defined myeloid sarcomas and some lymphomas. The sarcomas are transplantable to immunologically compromised hosts, showing that they are true malignancies. The animals also exhibit chronic myeloproliferation in their bone marrow. Spleen and marrow cells show increased transcription of NF-κB–regulated genes and tumors have higher nuclear p65. Genetic ablation of NF-κB p50 suppresses the myeloproliferation, showing that dysregulation of NF-κB is responsible for the myeloproliferative disease.

368 citations


Authors

Showing all 122 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David Baltimore203876162955
David P. Bartel116230173368
Peter S. Linsley10731870881
Balkrishen Bhat431157957
Lars Karlsson35665058
Adam Pavlicek32575574
Aimee L. Jackson316813213
Matthias John29798136
Daniel J. Hogan29923434
Eric G. Marcusson27735733
Charles R. Allerson22302940
Christine Esau21395000
Steven Lockton20481830
Aaron N. Chang20293180
B. Nelson Chau16242950
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20212
20201
20195
20182
201712
20168