Abstract

Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are a group of non-coding RNAs with a unique circular structure generated by back-splicing. It is acknowledged that circRNAs play critical roles in cardiovascular diseases. However, functional studies of circRNAs were impeded due to lack of effective invivo silencing approaches. Since most circRNAs are produced by protein-coding transcripts, gene editing typically affects the coding activity of the parental genes. In this study, we developed a circular antisense RNA (cA-circSlc8a1) that could silence the highly expressed circRNA circSlc8a1 in the mouse heart but not its parental Slc8a1 linear mRNA. Transgenic cA-circSlc8a1 mice developed congestive heart failure resulting in a significant increase in the body weight secondary to peripheral edema and congestive hepatopathy. To further test the role of circSlc8a1, we generated transgenic mice overexpressing circSlc8a1 and observed a protective effect of circSlc8a1 in a pressure overload model. Mechanistically, we found that circSlc8a1 translocated into mitochondria to drive ATP synthesis. While establishing a transgenic murine model for antisense-mediated circRNA silencing without interfering with the parental linear RNA, our finding revealed the essential role of circSlc8a1 in maintaining heart function and may lay the groundwork of using the circular antisense RNA as a potential gene therapy approach for cardiovascular diseases.

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