RNA biomarkers in spinal muscular atrophy: enhancing pathogenesis understanding and guiding precision medicine
Claudia Alberti, Angela Berardinelli, Giacomo P. Comi, Linda Ottoboni, Stefania Corti

TL;DR
This paper explores RNA biomarkers in spinal muscular atrophy to better understand the disease and improve personalized treatment strategies.
Contribution
The paper highlights the potential of RNA biomarkers, including specific microRNAs, for early detection and precision medicine in SMA.
Findings
SMN transcripts and microRNAs like miR-9, miR-206, and miR-132 show diagnostic and prognostic value in SMA.
MicroRNA profiling combined with clinical data can generate high predictive SMA scores.
Extracellular vesicle analysis and single-cell sequencing may enhance diagnostic precision in SMA.
Abstract
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurodegenerative disorder resulting from mutations in SMN1 that manifest as progressive muscle weakness and atrophy. Despite transformative therapies, such as nusinersen, risdiplam, and onasemnogene abeparvovec, heterogeneous patient responses underscore the need for reliable biomarkers to optimize treatment strategies. RNA biomarkers are particularly promising targets for monitoring SMA because the disease pathology is directly caused by impaired SMN protein, which is involved in RNA processing. Evidence suggests that SMN transcripts and specific microRNAs (i.e., miR-9, miR-206, and miR-132) are of significant diagnostic and prognostic value. In addition, specific microRNAs exhibit detectable changes in accessible biofluids at pre-symptomatic stages, enabling early non-invasive monitoring. Integration of global microRNA profiling (miRNome analysis)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurogenetic and Muscular Disorders Research · RNA Research and Splicing · Cardiomyopathy and Myosin Studies
