| Literature DB >> 33996898 |
Olga Khorkova1, Jane Hsiao1, Claes Wahlestedt2.
Abstract
The possibility of rational design and the resulting faster and more cost-efficient development cycles of nucleic acid-based therapeutics (NBTs), such as antisense oligonucleotides, siRNAs, and gene therapy vectors, have fueled increased activity in developing therapies for orphan diseases. Despite the difficulty of delivering NBTs beyond the blood-brain barrier, neurological diseases are significantly represented among the first targets for NBTs. As orphan disease NBTs are now entering the clinical stage, substantial efforts are required to develop the scientific background and infrastructure for NBT design and mechanistic studies, genetic testing, understanding natural history of orphan disorders, data sharing, NBT manufacturing, and regulatory support. The outcomes of these efforts will also benefit patients with "common" diseases by improving diagnostics, developing the widely applicable NBT technology platforms, and promoting deeper understanding of biological mechanisms that underlie disease pathogenesis. Furthermore, with successes in genetic research, a growing proportion of "common" disease cases can now be attributed to mutations in particular genes, essentially extending the orphan disease field. Together, the developments occurring in orphan diseases are building the foundation for the future of personalized medicine. In this review, we will focus on recent achievements in developing therapies for orphan neurological disorders.Entities:
Keywords: antisense oligonucleotide; gene therapy; neurological disorder; noncoding RNA; orphan disorder; siRNA
Year: 2021 PMID: 33996898 PMCID: PMC8115123 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2021.643681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
Nucleic acid–based therapeutics approved by the FDA as of November 2020.
| Drug name | Type | Target | Indication | Date | Company | Delivery route |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fomivirsen (Vitravene) | RNAseH, PS ASO | UL123 gene of cytomegalovirus | Cytomegalovirus retinitis | 1998 | Ionis, Novartis, Abbot | Intravitreal injection |
| Pegaptanib (Macugen) | Aptamer, pegylated PD, 2MOE, 2 F oligo | VEGF antagonist | Age-related macular degeneration | 2004 | NeXstar, Gilead, OSI | Intravitreal injection |
| Mipomersen (Kynamro) | Rnase H, PS 2MOE ASO | ApoB100 | Homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia | 2013 | Ionis, Kastle | SC |
| Talimogene laherparepvec (IMLYGIC/T-Vec/Oncovex) | Immunotherapy, herpes simplex virus 1 | Tumor cell lysis, immunostimulation | Melanoma | 2015 | BioVex, Amgen | Injection into lesions |
| Eteplirsen (ExonDys51) | Exon skipping, morpholino ASO | Dystrophin (DMD) | Exon 51-related Duchenne muscular dystrophy | 2016 | Sarepta | IV infusion |
| Nusinersen (Spinraza) | Exon skipping, PS 2MOE ASO | SMN2 | Spinal muscular atrophy | 2016 | Ionis, Biogen | IT |
| Voretigene neparvovec (Luxturna) | Gene therapy, AAV2 vector | RPE65 | Leber congenital amaurosis | 2017 | Spark Therapeutics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia | Subretinal injection |
| Inotersen (Tegsedi) | RNAse H, PS 2MOE ASO gapmer | TTR | Hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis | 2018 | Ionis, Akcea | SC |
| Patisiran (Onpattro) | siRNA, lipid nanoparticle | TTR | Hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis | 2018 | Alnylam | IV |
| Golodirsen (Vyondys 53) | Exon skipping, morpholino ASO | Dystrophin (DMD) | Exon 53-related Duchenne muscular dystrophy | 2019 | Sarepta | IV infusion |
| Milasen | Splice switching, PS 2MOE ASO | MFSD8 | Batten disease | 2019 | Boston Children’s Hospital | IT |
| Onasemnogene abeparvovec (Zolgensma) | Gene therapy, AAV9 | SMN1 | Spinal muscular atrophy | 2019 | Novartis, AveXis | IV infusion |
| Givosiran (Givlaari) | siRNA, GalNac-conjugated | ALAS1 | Acute hepatic porphyria | 2019 | Alnylam | SC |
| Viltolarsen (Viltepso) | Exon skipping, morpholino ASO | Dystrophin (DMD) | Exon 53-related Duchenne muscular dystrophy | 2020 | Nippon Shinyaku Pharma | IV |
| Volanesorsen (Waylivra) | Rnase H, PS 2MOE ASO | ApoCIII | Familial chylomicronaemia | 2020 | Ionis, Akcea | SC |
| Lumasiran (Oxlumo) | RNAi, enhanced stabilization chemistry-GalNAc | Glycolate oxidase (HAO1) | Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 | 2020 | Alnylam | SC |
Approved in Europe only.
Selected nucleic acid–based therapies in clinical trials as of November 2020.
| Drug name | Type | Target | Indication | Phase | Company | Delivery route |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Imetelstat (GRN163 L) | Telomerase blocker, NPS-palmitoyl ASO | Telomerase activity | Cancers | 3 | Geron | IV |
| Casimersen (SRP-4045, AMONDYS 45) | Exon skipping, PMO ASO | Dystrophin (DMD) | Exon 45-related Duchenne muscular dystrophy | NDA | Sarepta | IV |
| SRP-5051 | Exon skipping, PPMO ASO | Dystrophin (DMD) | Exon 51-related Duchenne muscular dystrophy | 1/2 | Sarepta | IV |
| Emapticap pegol (NOX-E36) | SpiegelmerAptamer | CCL2 inhibitor | Cancers, diabetes | 1/2 | NOXXON | SC |
| Olaptesed pegol (NOX-A12) | SpiegelmerAptamer | CXCL12 inhibitor | Cancers | 1/2 | NOXXON | IV |
| Cemdisiran (ALN-CC5) | siRNA, ESC-GalNAc | C5 (complement pathway) | Complement-related diseases | 2 | Alnylam | SC |
| Revusiran (ALN-TTRSC) | siRNA, PE 2OMe/2 F/GalNAc | TTR | Hereditary transthyretin-amyloidosis | 2 | Alnylam | SC |
| Fitusiran (ALN-AT3) | siRNA, ESC-GalNAc | Antithrombin | Hemophilia and rare bleeding disorders (RBDs) | 3 | Alnylam, Sanofi | SC |
| Inclisiran (Leqvio) | siRNA, ESC-GalNAc | PCSK9 | Familial hypercholsterolemia | 3 | Alnylam, The Medicines Company, Novartis | SC |
| AKCEA-TTR-LRx | RNAseH, LICA GalNac-PS 2MOE ASO | TTR | Hereditary TTR amyloidosis | 3 | Ionis, Akcea | SC |
| Vupanorsen (AKCEA-angptl3-lrx) | RNAseH, LICA/GalNac- PS 2MOE ASO | ANGPTL3 | Diabetes, hepatic steatosis, and hypertriglyceridaemia | 2 | Ionis, Akcea | SC |
| AKCEA-APOCIII-LRx (ISIS 678354) | RNAseH, GalNacPS 2MOE ASO | APOC-III | Hypertriglyceridemia | 2 | Ionis | SC |
| Donidalorsen (Ionis-PKK-LRx) | RNAseH, GalNacPS 2MOE ASO | Prekallikrein | Hereditary angioedema, COVID-19 | 1/2 | Ionis | SC |
| Suvodirsen | RNAseH, all-PS all-FL stereopure ASO | Dystrophin | Exon 51-related Duchenne muscular dystrophy | 1/2 | Wave | IV |
| Alipogene tiparvovec (Glybera) | Gene therapy, AAV1 | Lipoprotein lipase | Lipoprotein lipase deficiency | Approved by EMA | AMT, UniQure | Intramuscular injection |
| AT132 | Gene therapy, AAV8 | MTM1 | X-linked myotubular myopathy | 1/2 | Audentes, Astellas | IV |
| LYS-SAF302 | Gene therapy, AAVrh.10 | SGSH | Sanfilippo a syndrome | 1 | Lysogene | Intracerebral infusion |
| IONIS-ENAC-2.5Rx | RNAseH, PS 2MOE ASO | Epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) | Cystic fibrosis | 1 | Ionis | Nebulization |
| STK-001 | Splicing optimization, 2MOE PS ASO | SCN1A | Dravet syndrome | 2 | Stoke | IT |
| Miravirsen | LNA antagomir | miR-122 blocker | Hepatitis C | 2 | Santaris, Roche | IV or SC |
| Cobomarsen (MRG-106) | LNA antagomir | miR-155 | Blood cancers | 2 | Miragen | IV infusion |
| Remlarsen (MRG-201) | LNA promiR | miRNA 29 b | Pathological fibrosis | 2 | Miragen | Intradermal injection in biopsy site |
| MRG-110 | LNA antagomir | miRNA-92 | Heart failure and other ischemic disease | 1 | Miragen | Intradermal injection in wound |
| RGLS4326 | Antagomir | miR-17 | Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease | 1 |
| SC |
| RG-012 | Antagomir | miR-21 | Alport syndrome | 2 |
| SC |
| MTL-CEBPA | saRNA modulator, dsRNA in SMARTICLEs | CEBPA | Hepatocellular carcinoma | 2 | MiNA | IV |
| Tofersen (IONIS-SOD1Rx) | RNAseH, PS 2MOE ASO | Superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) | SOD1 ALS | 3 | Ionis, Biogen | IT |
| IONIS-C9Rx/BIIB078 | RNAseH, PS 2MOE ASO | C9ORF72 | C9ORF72-ALS | 1-2 | Ionis, Biogen | IT |
| ION541 (BIIB105) | RNAseH, PS 2MOE ASO | ATXN2 | ALS | 2 | Ionis, Biogen | IT |
| Tominersen/Ionis-HTTRx/RG6042 | RNAseH, PS-2MOE | HTT | Huntington's | 3 | Ionis, Roche | IT |
| AMT-130 | AAV5-miRNA | HTT | Huntington's | 1 | UniQure | Convection-enhanced stereotactic neurosurgical delivery |
| WVE-120101 and WVE-120102 | RNAseH, stereopure PS ASO | Mutant HTT | Huntington’s | 2 | Wave Life Sciences, Takeda | IT |
| ION464 (Ionis-BIIB6Rx/BIIB101) | RNAseH, PS 2MOE ASO | SNCA | Parkinson’s, multiple system atrophy | 2 | Ionis, Biogen | IT |
| Ezaladcigene resoparvovec (VY-AADC/NBIb-1817) | Gene therapy, AAV2 | AADC | Parkinson’s | 3 | Voyager, Neurocrine | MRI-guided convective infusion |
| AXO-lenti-PD/OXB-102 | Gene therapy, lentivirus | Tyrosine hydroxylase, cyclohydrolase 1, aromatic | Parkinson’s | 1/2 | Axovant | MRI-guided intracerebral infusion |
| AAV2-GDNF | Gene therapy, AAV2 | GDNF | Parkinson’s | Brain Neurotherapy | CED-infusion into putamen with stereotactic guidance | |
| CERE-120 | Gene therapy, AAV | Neurturin | Parkinson’s | 1/2 | Ceregene, Sangamo | Intracerebral injection |
| PTC-AADC (GT-AADC, AGIL-AADC) | Gene therapy, AAV | DDC | AADC deficiency | 1/2 | Agilis, PTC | Intracerebral |
| IONIS-MAPTRx (BIIB080, ISIS 81490) | PS 2MOE ASO | MAPT | Alzheimer’s, frontotemporal degeneration | 1 | Ionis, Biogen | IT |
| AAVrh.10hAPOE2 | Gene therapy, AAVrh.10hAPOE2 | APOE2 | Alzheimer’s with homozygous APOE4 | 1 | Weill Cornell, AD Drug Discovery Foundation | Intracisternally |
| ABO-202 | Gene therapy, scAAV9 | PPT1 | Ceroid neuronal lipofuscinoses 1 | 1/2 | Abeona, Taysha | IV + IT |
| AAVrh.10CUhCLN2 | Gene therapy, AAVrh.10 | TTP1 | CLN2 | 1/2 | Weill Cornell, NIH | Intracerebral |
| AT-GTX-502 (scAAV9.P546.CLN3) | Gene therapy, scAAV9 | Battenin | CLN3 | 1/2 | Amicus | IT |
| AT-GTX-501 | Gene therapy, scAAV9 | CLN6 | CLN6 | 1/2 | Amicus | IT |
| RGX-111 | Gene therapy, AAV9 | IDUA | Mucopolysaccharidosis type I | 1/2 | REGENXBIO | Intracisternal |
| SB-318 | ZFN-directed gene transfer, rAAV2/6 | IDUA | Mucopolysaccharidosis type I | 1/2 | Sangamo | IV |
| RGX-121 | Gene therapy, AAV9 | IDS | Mucopolysaccharidosis type II | 1/2 | REGENXBIO | Intracisternal |
| SB-913 | ZFN-directed gene transfer, rAAV2/6 | IDS | Mucopolysaccharidosis type II | 1/2 | REGENXBIO | IV infusion |
| ABO-102 | Gene therapy, AAV | SGSH | Sanfilippo a syndrome | 1/2 | Abeona | IV infusion |
| rAAV2/5-hNAGLU | Gene therapy, rAAV2/5 | NAGLU | Sanfilippo B syndrome | 1/2 | UniQure, Institut Pasteur | Intraparenchymal infusion |
| ABO-101 (rAAV9.CMV.hNAGLU) | Gene therapy, rAAV9 | NAGLU | Sanfilippo B syndrome | 1/2 | Abeona | IV |
Sequential assignment or parallel assignment.
Adaptive design.
List of companies mentioned in the text.
| Company name (Location) | Website |
|---|---|
| Abeona Therapeutics, Inc. (Dallas, TX) |
|
| Agilis Biotherapeutics Inc. (now PTC, Lynnfield, MA) | |
| Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (Cambridge, MA) |
|
| Amicus Therapeutics (Cranberry, NJ) |
|
| Amsterdam Molecular Therapeutics (now uniQure, Amsterdam, Netherlands) | |
| Apic Bio Inc. (Cambridge, MA) |
|
| Aspa Therapeutics (Palo Alto, CA) |
|
| Avexis (now Novartis Gene Therapies, Bannockburn, IL) |
|
| AVROBIO, Inc. (Cambridge, MA) |
|
| Axovant Gene Therapies Ltd. (now Sio Gene Therapies, New York, NY) |
|
| Biogen (Cambridge, MA) |
|
| Brain Neurotherapy Bio, Inc. (Columbus, OH and Oakland, CA) |
|
| BridgeBio Pharma (Palo Alto, CA) |
|
| Ceregene (now Sangamo, San Diego, CA) | |
| CuRNA /OPKO Health (Miami, FL) |
|
| Genzyme (now Sanofi Genzyme, Cambridge MA) |
|
| Geron Corporation (Menlo Park, CA) |
|
| Ionis Pharmaceuticals Inc. (Carlsbad, CA ) |
|
| Lysogene (France) |
|
| MiNA Therapeutics Ltd. (London, UK) |
|
| Miragen Therapeutics Inc. (Boulder, CO) |
|
| Neurocrine Biosciences (San Diego, CA) |
|
| nLife Therapeutics, S.L. (Granada, Spain) |
|
| Noxxon Pharma (Germany) |
|
| Ovid Therapeutics (New York, NY and Cambridge, MA) |
|
| ProQR Therapeutics NV (Leiden, Netherlands) |
|
| PTC (South Plainfield, NJ) |
|
| REGENXBIO (Rockville, MD) |
|
| Regulus Therapeutics Inc. (Carlsbad, CA) |
|
| Roche (Basel, Switzerland) |
|
| Sangamo Therapeutics, Inc. (Richmond, CA) |
|
| Sarepta Therapeutics (Cambridge, MA) |
|
| Stoke Therapeutics (Bedford, MA) |
|
| Stride Bio Inc. (Durham, NC) |
|
| Taysha Gene Therapies (Dallas, TX) |
|
| TriLink Biotechnologies Inc. (San Diego, CA) |
|
| UniQure Biopharma (Lexington, MA) |
|
| Voyager Therapeutics (Cambridge, MA) |
|
| Wave Life Sciences USA, Inc. (Cambridge, MA) |
|
FIGURE 1Innovations in NBT chemistry. PD: oligonucleotides with phosphodiester bond (natural DNA/RNA); PS: phosphorothioate bond; NP: N3’-->P5’ phosphoramidate bond; NPS: N3'-->P5′ thio-phosphoramidate bond; LNA: locked nucleic acid unit; PMO: phosphorodiamidate Morpholino oligomer; TNA: α-l-threose-based; A, G: nucleotide bases; R: currently used 2′O modifications of the sugar moiety.
FIGURE 2Novel biological mechanisms accessible through NBTs. (A) Modulation of splicing; SP: spliceosome components; ASO: antisense oligonucleotides. (B) Modulation of miRNA activity. (C) Small activating RNAs (saRNA). (D) Modulation of natural antisense transcript (NAT) activity; RNApol: RNA polymerase. (E) Extra-coding RNA (ecRNA); DNMT1: DNA methyl transferase 1. (F) Enhancer RNAs (eRNA); negative elongation factor complex (NELF); CBP: histone acetyltransferase CREB-binding protein.