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Control of backbone chemistry and chirality boost oligonucleotide splice switching activity

Authors :
Pachamuthu Kandasamy
Graham McClorey
Mamoru Shimizu
Nayantara Kothari
Rowshon Alam
Naoki Iwamoto
Jayakanthan Kumarasamy
Gopal R Bommineni
Adam Bezigian
Onanong Chivatakarn
David C D Butler
Michael Byrne
Katarzyna Chwalenia
Kay E Davies
Jigar Desai
Juili Dilip Shelke
Ann F Durbin
Ruth Ellerington
Ben Edwards
Jack Godfrey
Andrew Hoss
Fangjun Liu
Kenneth Longo
Genliang Lu
Subramanian Marappan
Jacopo Oieni
Ik-Hyeon Paik
Erin Purcell Estabrook
Chikdu Shivalila
Maeve Tischbein
Tomomi Kawamoto
Carlo Rinaldi
Joana Rajão-Saraiva
Snehlata Tripathi
Hailin Yang
Yuan Yin
Xiansi Zhao
Cong Zhou
Jason Zhang
Luciano Apponi
Matthew J A Wood
Chandra Vargeese
Source :
Nucleic acids research. 50(10)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Although recent regulatory approval of splice-switching oligonucleotides (SSOs) for the treatment of neuromuscular disease such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy has been an advance for the splice-switching field, current SSO chemistries have shown limited clinical benefit due to poor pharmacology. To overcome limitations of existing technologies, we engineered chimeric stereopure oligonucleotides with phosphorothioate (PS) and phosphoryl guanidine-containing (PN) backbones. We demonstrate that these chimeric stereopure oligonucleotides have markedly improved pharmacology and efficacy compared with PS-modified oligonucleotides, preventing premature death and improving median survival from 49 days to at least 280 days in a dystrophic mouse model with an aggressive phenotype. These data demonstrate that chemical optimization alone can profoundly impact oligonucleotide pharmacology and highlight the potential for continued innovation around the oligonucleotide backbone. More specifically, we conclude that chimeric stereopure oligonucleotides are a promising splice-switching modality with potential for the treatment of neuromuscular and other genetic diseases impacting difficult to reach tissues such as the skeletal muscle and heart.

Details

ISSN :
13624962
Volume :
50
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nucleic acids research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e4563bb9a20823ec7e04b7dd2e362f73