| Literature DB >> 28325278 |
Abstract
A main challenge in realizing the full potential of nucleic acid therapeutics is efficient delivery of them into targeted tissues and cells. N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) is a well-defined liver-targeted moiety benefiting from its high affinity with asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR). By conjugating it directly to the oligonucleotides or decorating it to a certain delivery system as a targeting moiety, GalNAc has achieved compelling successes in the development of nucleic acid therapeutics in recent years. Several oligonucleotide modalities are undergoing pivotal clinical studies, followed by a blooming pipeline in the preclinical stage. This review covers the progress of GalNAc-decorated oligonucleotide drugs, including siRNAs, anti-miRs, and ASOs, which provides a panorama for this field.Entities:
Keywords: ASGPR; ASO; GalNAc; RNAi; anti-miR; liver-targeted delivery; oligonucleotide; siRNA
Year: 2016 PMID: 28325278 PMCID: PMC5363494 DOI: 10.1016/j.omtn.2016.12.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther Nucleic Acids
Figure 1Gene Regulation Pathways for siRNA, miRNA, Anti-miR, and ASO
(A and B) RNAi pathway. (A) First, miRNA genes are transcribed by RNA polymerase II or III (pol II/III) into long (60- to 100-nt) primary miRNA (pri-miRNA) sequences with stem-loop structures that are further cleaved by the Drosha–DGCR8 (DiGeorge syndrome critical region gene 8) complex to form ∼70-nt precursor miRNA (pre-miRNA) structures containing 2-nt overhangs at their 3′ ends.118, 119 After being transported to the cytoplasm by exportin-5, pre-miRNAs are processed by Dicer into mature (∼22-nt) miRNAs. (B) siRNAs can be obtained directly by chemical synthesis. They can also be generated from the cleavage of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), DsiRNA, or short hairpin RNA (shRNA) by Dicer.120, 121 shRNA is transcribed by pol II from an shRNA-expressing plasmid. A chemically synthesized siRNA-, dsRNA-, DsiRNA-, or shRNA-expressing plasmid can be exogenously added into the cell. Then, mature miRNA and siRNA will be assembled into the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). RISC contains AGO (Argonaute), TRBP (HIV-1 transactivation responsive element [TAR] RNA-binding protein), and other proteins. The antisense (guide) strand of siRNA/miRNA remains in the RISC, forming activated siRISC or miRISC. Activated siRISC finds its target mRNA in a complete-match way, cleaves the target mRNA, and thus blocks its translation (A). Meanwhile, activated miRISC binds to target mRNA by forming a bulge sequence in the middle and inhibits its expression by either translation repression or mRNA cleavage (B). Translationally repressed mRNA is either stored in P bodies or enters the mRNA decay pathway for destruction. (C) When anti-miRs are added into the cell, they can specifically associate with Argonaute-bound miRNAs, preventing association with target mRNAs, which leads to increased expression of the targeted mRNAs. (D) ASOs commonly have a phosphorothioate backbone with flanks that are modified with 2′-O-methyl (2′-OMe) or 2′-MOE or S-cEt residues (highlighted in purple). Flank modifications can improve the binding affinity and nuclease resistance of ASOs and reduce immune stimulation of the PS backbone and do not support RNase H cleavage. The unmodified “gap” in a gapmer-mRNA duplex will recruit RNase H, resulting in degradation of duplexed mRNA.
Figure 2GalNAc/ASGPR-Mediated Oligonucleotide Delivery to Hepatocytes
(A–D) First, GalNAc-decorated oligonucleotides (siRNA, A; anti-miR, B; ASO, C) are recognized by ASGPR, which triggers endocytosis via the clathrin-mediated pathway. All conjugations of mono-, di-, tri-, or tetra-GalNAc sugars can enhance the delivery efficiency of oligonucleotides to hepatocytes.51, 107 For simplicity, only trivalent GalNAc conjugates are indicated. Then, the payloads escape from the endosome/lysosome and further mediate RNAi (for siRNA, A) block the function of miRNA (for anti-miR, B), or cause mRNA degradation (for antisense, C). The exact mechanism for GalNAc conjugate escaping from the endosome/lysosome is still unspecified. Moreover, GalNAc conjugate can also be used for liver-targeted delivery of other nucleic acid therapeutics and small molecules (such as miRNA and doxorubicin), resulting in certain biological effect in the cells (D). Meanwhile, ASGPR will recycle to the cell surface within ∼15 min and mediate the next internalization.
Disease Targets and Nucleic Acid Therapeutic Candidates in the Development Pipeline
| Indication(s) | Therapeutic Name | Target | Type | Delivery | Administration Route | Clinical Status | Company | NCT Number | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Familial amyloidotic cardiomyopathy | ALN-TTRsc/Revusiran | TTR | siRNA | STC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase III, terminated | Alnylam | J.D. Gillmore, et al., 2015, J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., abstract; | |
| Hypercholesterolemia | ALN-PCSsc | PCSK9 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase II | Alnylam | K.J. Pasi et al., 2016, Haemophilia, abstract; K. Fitzgerald et al., 2015, Circulation, abstract; | |
| Hemophilia and rare bleeding disorders | ALN-AT3/Fitusiran | AT | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I/II | Alnylam | K.J. Pasi et al., 2016, Haemophilia, abstract; | |
| Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria | ALN-CC5 | C5 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I/II | Alnylam | ||
| Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency | ALN-AAT | AAT | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I/II, terminated | Alnylam | ||
| Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 | ALN-GO1 | GO (HAO1) | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I/II | Alnylam | ||
| Hepatitis B virus infection | ALN-HBV | conserved region of HBV | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I/II | Alnylam | L. Sepp-Lorenzino et al., 2015, Hepatology, abstract; | |
| Hepatic porphyrias | ALN-AS1 | ALAS1 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I | Alnylam | ||
| Familial amyloidotic cardiomyopathy | ALN-TTRsc02 | TTR | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I | Alnylam | ||
| Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency | ALN-AAT02 | AAT | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | ||
| β-Thalassemia/iron overload disorders | ALN-TMP | Tmprss6 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | J. Butler et al., 2013, Blood, abstract | |
| Hereditary angioedema | ALN-F12 | F12 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | Akinc et al., 2016, J. Allergy Clin. Immunol., abstract | |
| Thromboprophylaxis | ALN-F12 | F12 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | ||
| Hypertriglyceridemia | ALN-AC3 | ApoC3 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | ||
| Mixed hyperlipidemia/hypertriglyceridemia | ALN-ANG | ANGPTL3 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | W. Querbes et al., 2013, Circulation, abstract | |
| Hypertension/pre-eclampsia | ALN-AGT | AGT | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | ||
| Hepatitis D virus infection | ALN-HDV | HDV genome | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | ||
| Chronic liver infection | ALN-PDL | PD-L1 | siRNA | ESC-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Alnylam | ||
| Hepatitis B virus infection | ARC-520 | conserved region of HBV | siRNA | GalNAc-masked DPC | i.v. | phase IIb | Arrowhead | ||
| Hepatitis B virus infection | ARC-521 | integrated DNA of HBV genome | siRNA | GalNAc-masked DPC | i.v. | phase I/IIa | Arrowhead | ||
| Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency | ARC-AAT | AAT | siRNA | GalNAc-masked DPC | i.v. | phase I | Arrowhead | ||
| Thrombosis and angioedema | ARC-F12 | F12 | siRNA | GalNAc-masked DPC | i.v. | preclinical | Arrowhead | S. Melquist et al., 2016, J. Allergy Clin. Immunol., abstract | |
| Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 | DCR-PHsc | HAO1 | siRNA | DsiRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Dicerna | ||
| Orphan genetic disease | DCR-undisclosed | undisclosed target | siRNA | DsiRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Dicerna | ||
| Cardiovascular disease | DCR-PCSK9 | PCSK9 | siRNA | DsiRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | research | Dicerna | ||
| Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency | DCR-AAT | AAT | siRNA | DsiRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | research | Dicerna | ||
| Fibrotic liver diseases | DCR-HMGB1 | HMGB1 | siRNA | DsiRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | research | Dicerna | ||
| Hepatitis B virus infection | DCR-HBV | conserved region of HBV | siRNA | DsiRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | research | Dicerna | ||
| Chronic liver diseases (liver fibrosis) | DCR-β-catenin | CTNNB1 | siRNA | DsiRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | research | Dicerna | ||
| Rare genetic diseases/metabolic disorder/multiple liver-related diseases | GalXC UDT #1–#8 | eight undisclosed targets | siRNA | DsiRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | research | Dicerna | ||
| Unknown | unknown | undisclosed targets | siRNA | siRNA-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | research | Silence | ||
| Rare genetic diseases 1 | unknown | undisclosed targets | unknown (ASO or RNAi) | GalNAc-conjugated molecule | NA | research | Wave Life Science | ||
| Rare genetic diseases 2 | unknown | undisclosed targets | unknown (ASO or RNAi) | GalNAc-conjugated molecule | NA | research | Wave Life Science | ||
| Hepatitis C virus infection | RG-101 | microRNA-122 | anti-miR | anti-miR-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase II | Regulus | NA | M.H. van der Ree et al., 2015, Hepatology, abstract; |
| NASH/type 2 diabetes/pre-diabetes | RG-125 | microRNA-103/107 | anti-miR | anti-miR-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I | Regulus/AstraZeneca | NA | M. Sundqvist et al., 2015, Diabetologia, abstract; B. Wagner et al., 2015, Diabetologia, abstract; |
| High lipoprotein(a) | IONIS-APO(a)-LRx | Apo(a) | ASO | ASO-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | Phase I/IIa | Ionis/Akcea | ||
| Mixed dyslipidemias | IONIS-ANGPTL3-LRX | ANGPTL3 | ASO | ASO-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I/II | Ionis/Akcea | ||
| Ocular disease | IONIS-GSK4-LRx | Undisclosed targets | ASO | ASO-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I | Ionis/GSK | NA | |
| Hepatitis B virus infection | IONIS-HBV-LRx | HBV genome | ASO | ASO-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | phase I | Ionis/GSK | NA | |
| Severe high triglycerides / High triglycerides with type 2 diabetes | IONIS-APOCIII-LRX | ApoC3 | ASO | ASO-GalNAc-conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Ionis/Akcea | ||
| Acromegaly | IONIS-GHR-LRx | GHr | ASO | ASO-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Ionis | ||
| β-Thalassemia | IONIS-TMPRSS6-LRx | Tmprss6 | ASO | ASO-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Ionis | ||
| Treatment-resistant hypertension | IONIS-AGT-LRx | AGT | ASO | ASO-GalNAc conjugate | s.c. | preclinical | Ionis |
Abbreviations: TTR, transthyretin amyloidosis; PCSK9, proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9; AT, antithrombin; C5, complement component 5; AAT, alpha-1 antitrypsin; HAO1 (GO), hydroxyacid oxidase (glycolate oxidase) 1; ALAS1, aminolevulinic acid synthase 1; Tmprss6, transmembrane protease serine 6; F12, factor XII; ApoC3, Apolipoprotein C3; ANGPTL3, Angiopoietin-like 3; AGT, angiotensinogen; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; HMGB1, high mobility group box 1 protein; CTNNB1, catenin beta-1 or β-catenin; GHr, growth hormone receptor; s.c., subcutaneous; i.v., intravenous; NCT, national clinical trial; NA, not available.
Predicted name.
Dosing, Efficacy, and Safety Profiles of siRNA Therapeutics in Clinical Stage Developed by Alnylam
| Therapeutic Name | Clinical Status | Dose and Regimen | Annualized Exposure Levels (g) | Subjects | Efficacy | Safety | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALN-TTRsc/Revusiran | phase II/III | MD | 500 mg, daily × 5, followed by weekly | 28 | patients with ATTR amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy | durable TTR lowering of >85% through 18 months: maximum knockdown of serum TTR up to 98%; mean maximum knockdown of 88% | imbalance of mortality in the Revusiran arm compared with placebo |
| five of nine hATTR-CM patients have stable 6-MWD at 12 months | causes of these safety findings still unclear | ||||||
| ALN-PCSsc | phase I | SAD | 25, 100, 300, 500, 800 mg | NA | patients with elevated LDL-C, patients with high cardiovascular risk and elevated LDL-C | max PCSK9 inhibition of 88.7% with mean max of 82.3% (±2.0) | one subject (800 mg) with mild, localized ISRs |
| max LDL-C reduction of 78.1% with mean max of 59.3% (±5.0) | |||||||
| max reductions: LP(a) (–77%), Total-C (–48%), ApoB (–72%), non-HDL (–68%) | |||||||
| MAD | 125 mg qW × 4 | NA | max PCSK9 inhibition of 94.4% with mean max of 88.5% (±1.6) | three subjects with mild, localized ISRs at higher drug exposures | |||
| 250 mg q2W × 2 | max LDL-C reduction of 83.0% with mean max of 64.4% (±5.4) | one subject (500 mg qM × 2 + statin) experienced ALT elevation ∼4 × ULN without rise in bilirubin—related to concomitant statin therapy | |||||
| 300 mg qM × 2 | max reductions: LP(a) (–76%), total-C (–55%), ApoB (−68%), non-HDL (–73%) | ||||||
| 500 mg qM × 2 | durability sustained up to 6 months supporting bi-annual, low-volume SC dose regimen | ||||||
| on or off statins | |||||||
| phase II | PFD | 300 mg q3M | 1.2, 0.6 | patients | NA | NA | |
| 300 mg q6M | |||||||
| ALN-AT3/Fitusiran | phase I/II | SAD | 0.030 mg/kg × 1 | NA | healthy volunteers | mean maximal AT lowering of 87 ± 1% at 80 mg fixed dose; | no SAEs related to study drug; no thromboembolic events; |
| MAD | 0.015 mg/kg qW × 3 | NA | patients with hemophilia A or B | median ABR = 0, with 53% patients bleed-free and 82% patients experiencing zero spontaneous bleeds in monthly dose cohorts | AEs (excluding ISRs) in ≥ 10% of patients, majority mild or moderate in severity | ||
| 0.045 mg/kg qW × 3 | one patient with transient elevations of ALT (10 × ULN), AST (8 × ULN), CRP, and D-dimer; no increase in total bilirubin | ||||||
| 0.075 mg/kg qW × 3 | |||||||
| 0.225 mg/kg qM × 3 | NA | patients with hemophilia A or B | |||||
| 0.450 mg/kg qM × 3 | |||||||
| 0.900 mg/kg qM × 3 | |||||||
| 1.800 mg/kg qM × 3 | |||||||
| 80 mg qM × 3 | |||||||
| 50 mg qM × 3 | NA | patients with hemophilia A or B with inhibitors | |||||
| 80 mg qM × 3 | |||||||
| PFD | 80 mg qM | 0.96 | patients | ||||
| ALN-CC5 | phase I/II | SAD | 50, 200, 400, 600, 900 mg | NA | healthy volunteers | after single dose, up to 99% C5 KD with mean max KD of 98 ± 0.9% | no reported SAEs, all AEs mild or moderate, no discontinuations, low incidence of mild ISRs |
| after multiple doses, up to 99% C5 KD with mean max KD of 99 ± 0.2% | |||||||
| clamped lowering of C5 with very low inter-subject variability | |||||||
| durable KD and complement inhibition lasting months, supportive of once monthly and potentially once quarterly SC dose regimen | |||||||
| MAD | 100 mg qW × 5; | NA | healthy volunteers | NA | NA | ||
| 200 mg qW × 5; | |||||||
| 400 mg qW × 5; | |||||||
| 600 mg q2W × 7; | |||||||
| 200 mg qW × 5, q2W × 4; | |||||||
| 200 mg qW × 5, qM × 2. | |||||||
| PFD | 600 mg, q3M | 2.4 | patients | NA | NA | ||
| ALN-AAT | phase I/II | SAD | 0.1 mg/kg | NA | healthy volunteers | 6.0 mg/kg dose group; | dose-dependent increase in hepatic transaminase observed |
| 0.3 mg/kg | max AAT KD: 88.9% | three patients at 6.0 mg/kg with liver enzyme (ALT, AST) elevation (∼6–8 ULN) | |||||
| 1.0 mg/kg | mean maximal KD: 83.9 ± 2.6% | ||||||
| 3.0 mg/kg | mean AAT KD at ∼6 months: 75.0 ± 1.2% | ||||||
| 6.0 mg/kg | |||||||
| MAD | 1.0 mg/kg, q28d × 4 | ∼1.0 | healthy volunteers | AAT knockdown at 1 mg/kg multidose comparable with 3 and 6 mg/kg single doses | NA | ||
| ALN-GO1 | phase I/II | SAD | 0.3 mg/kg × 1 | NA | healthy volunteers | dose-dependent increase in plasma and urine glycolate levels, with earliest onset of activity at higher doses evident by day 29 post dose and sustained until day 85 | no drug-related SAEs or discontinuations because of AEs |
| 1.0 mg/kg × 1 | the lowest dose with appreciable glycolate increase is 1 mg/kg | total of 61 AEs reported, all were mild to moderate | |||||
| 3.0 mg/kg × 1 | |||||||
| 6.0 mg/kg × 1 | |||||||
| MAD | 1.0 mg/kg, q28d × 3 | NA | PH1 patients | NA | NA | ||
| ALN-HBV | phase I/II | SAD | 0.1, 0.3, 1.0, 3.0 mg/kg; 2 optional doses | NA | healthy volunteers | preclinical data in AAV-HBV mouse model | NA |
| SAD | 0.1, 0.3, 1.0, 3.0 mg/kg; 3 optional doses | NA | patients | single SC dose at 3 mg/kg achieves > 2 log10 HBsAg reduction lasting > 30 days | |||
| MAD | starting dose TBD, Q4W × 4 doses; TPP: 100–200 mg fixed dose monthly | TPP: 1.2–2.4 | patients | > 4 month HBsAg KD after 3 mg/kg qW × 3. | |||
| ALN-AS1 | phase I | SAD | 0.035 mg/kg × 1 | NA | ASHE patients | rapid, dose-dependent, and durable lowering of ALAS1 mRNA and urinary ALA and PBG | no drug-related SAEs or discontinuations because of AEs |
| 0.10 mg/kg × 1 | for mRNA: 64% ± 1% with a single 2.5 mg/kg dose and 54% ± 2% with multiple 1.0 mg/kg doses | all AEs were mild or moderate in severity | |||||
| 0.35 mg/kg × 1 | for urinary ALA and PBG: 86% and 95%, respectively, with a single 2.5 mg/kg dose | two SAD subjects (0.035 and 0.10 mg/kg) were hospitalized for SAE of “abdominal pain” but not drug-related | |||||
| 1.0 mg/kg × 1 | 84% and 89%, respectively, with multiple 1.0 mg/kg doses | one MAD subject (1 mg/kg) experienced a miscarriage but not drug-related | |||||
| 2.5 mg/kg × 1 | |||||||
| MAD | 0.35 mg/kg qM × 2 | NA | |||||
| 1.0 mg/kg qM × 2 | |||||||
| MD | TBD | NA | AIP patients with recurrent attacks | NA | NA | ||
| PFD | 2.5 mg/kg qM | ∼2.4 | patients | NA | NA | ||
| ALN-TTRsc02 | Phase I | SAD and MAD | in NHP: | TPP in human: ∼0.4 | phase I: healthy volunteers | in NHP; | NA |
| 1 or 3 mg/kg qM × 4. | TPP: patients with ATTR amyloidosis | sustained ≥ 95% TTR knockdown with qM dosing at 1 mg/kg in NHP | |||||
| TPP in human: | sustained 90% TTR knockdown up to 4 months after last 3 mg/kg dose | ||||||
| 50–100 mg qQ | SD 1 mg/kg ALN-TTRsc02 triggered higher serum TTR lowering compared with MD 5 mg/kg Revusiran | ||||||
Developed by Alnylam.70, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116 Abbreviations: SAD, single ascending dose; MAD, multiple ascending dose; SD, single dose; MD, multiple dose; PFD, projected fixed dose; qW, weekly; qM, monthly; qQ, quarterly; LDL-C, low density lipoprotein cholesterol; total-C, total cholesterol; non-HDL, non-high density lipoprotein cholesterol; ApoB, apolipoprotein B; ABR, annualized bleeding rate; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; CRP, C-reactive protein; PH1, primary hyperoxaluria type 1; AAV, adeno-associated virus; ASHE, asymptomatic high excreters; AIP, acute intermittent porphyria; KD, knockdown; TBD, to be determined; TPP, target product profile; NHP, non-human primate.