| Literature DB >> 34959371 |
Bruno Baptista1, Rita Carapito1, Nabila Laroui2, Chantal Pichon2, Fani Sousa1.
Abstract
The perspective of using messenger RNA (mRNA) as a therapeutic molecule first faced some uncertainties due to concerns about its instability and the feasibility of large-scale production. Today, given technological advances and deeper biomolecular knowledge, these issues have started to be addressed and some strategies are being exploited to overcome the limitations. Thus, the potential of mRNA has become increasingly recognized for the development of new innovative therapeutics, envisioning its application in immunotherapy, regenerative medicine, vaccination, and gene editing. Nonetheless, to fully potentiate mRNA therapeutic application, its efficient production, stabilization and delivery into the target cells are required. In recent years, intensive research has been carried out in this field in order to bring new and effective solutions towards the stabilization and delivery of mRNA. Presently, the therapeutic potential of mRNA is undoubtedly recognized, which was greatly reinforced by the results achieved in the battle against the COVID-19 pandemic, but there are still some issues that need to be improved, which are critically discussed in this review.Entities:
Keywords: gene editing; immunotherapy; mRNA; protein replacement therapies
Year: 2021 PMID: 34959371 PMCID: PMC8707022 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13122090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Structural comparison of RNA and DNA molecules.
| Characteristics | DNA | RNA |
|---|---|---|
| Type of sugar | Deoxyribose | Ribose |
| Bases | A, T, C, G | A, U, C, G |
| Double or single stranded | Double | Single |
| Secondary structure | Double helix | Many types |
| Stability | Stable | Easily degraded |
Figure 1Schematic representation of eukaryotic mRNA, integrating the fundamental regions for its processing, such as 5′ UTR, protein coding region, and 3′ UTR. Schematization of polyadenylation process and introduction of Cap at the 5′ end, as well as its biological and structural functions. P—Phosphate group; N—Nucleotide; CH3—Methyl group; A—Adenine; G—Guanine; UTR—Untranslated region.
Figure 2Schematic representation of Extra- and Intracellular Barriers for nucleic acids delivery. (I)—Endo and exonuclease degradation; (II)—Interaction and binding with erythrocytes; (III)—Binding and aggregation via serum protein complexation; (IV)—Immune activation to delivered nucleic acids.
Figure 3Schematic representation of different delivery strategies for mRNA therapies. There are represented 3 methods for the delivery of mRNA: physical methods, such as electroporation and gene gun; viral delivery systems, that uses recombinant virus; and non-viral delivery systems, such as lipid nanoparticles, polyplex, lipoplex and lipopolyplex.
Figure 41 (Green)—Extraction of the patient’s cells by biopsy; 2—In vitro cell growth of cells from biopsy; 3—In vitro cell transfection by encapsulated and/or naked synthetic mRNA; 4—Cell growth of transfected cells and undergoing mRNA translation; 5—Autograft with mRNA transfected cells for therapeutic protein production. 1′ (Blue)—Systemic (intravenous or intramuscular) or localized (target organ or tissue) delivery of nanoparticle and mRNA formulations into the patient.
Therapeutic approaches based on mRNA and their functions.
| Therapeutic Approach | Objective/Function |
|---|---|
| Protein Replacement | Restore function, increase expression or replace protein in rare monogenic diseases |
| Cell reprogramming | Modulate cellular behavior by expressing transcription and/or growth factors |
| Immunotherapies | Elicit specific immune responses against target cells, for example through therapeutic antibodies |
Figure 5Antigen processing and presentation by dendritic cells, for adaptive immune system activation, following subcutaneous injection of a mRNA vaccine. A synthetic mRNA is internalized by antigen presenting dendritic cells, where the mRNA is translated. Then, the antigen is exposed by class I or II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules and is later recognized by CD8+ or CD4+ T cells, activating chemical and humoral responses.
Advantages and disadvantages of non-amplifying mRNA Vaccines and SAM Vaccines.
| mRNA Vaccines | Structure | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-amplifying mRNA Vaccines | Basic structure of the mRNA, with a coding region for the desired antigens. | - Relatively small mRNA size (~2–3 kb). | - Potential toxicity from modified nucleotides. | [ |
| SAM Vaccines | Encode a manipulated RNA virus genome (replicon). It generally contains two different protein coding regions, one encoding nonstructural proteins involved in mRNA capping and replication, and the other in antigen expression. | - High yield of target antigen. | - RNA replicons are not able to tolerate many of the synthetic nucleotide modifications and sequence alterations. | [ |
Figure 6(A)—Schematic structure of conventional non-amplifying mRNA vaccine. (B)—Schematic structure of self-amplifying mRNA vaccine (replicon). UTR—Untranslated region; nsP—Non-structural proteins; A—Adenine; G—Guanine; P—Phosphate group.
Clinical trials for RNA-Based Protein Therapy (Protein replacement, cell reprogramming, immunotherapy) and gene editing.
| Name | Therapetic Modality | Protein Target | Administration Method | Delivery Vehicle | Disease | Sponsor Institution | ClinicalTrials.gov Identifer | Phase | Therapeutic Approach | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MRT5005 | mRNA | CFTR | Inhalation | LNPs | Cystic fibrosis | Translate Bio | NCT03375047 | I/II | Protein Replacement | [ |
| AZD8601 | mRNA | VEGF-A | Intracardiac injection | Naked mRNA | Heart failure | AstraZeneca | NCT03370887 | II | Cell reprogramming | [ |
| CV7201 | mRNA | Rabies virus glycoprotein | I.D or I.M | RNActive, protamine | Rabies | CureVac | NCT02241135 | I | Immunotherapy | [ |
| CV7202 | mRNA | Rabies virus glycoprotein | I.M | LNPs | Rabies | NCT03713086 | I | Immunotherapy | [ | |
| CV9201 | mRNA | TAAs | I.D | RNActive, protamine | NSCLC | NCT00923312 | I/II | Immunotherapy | [ | |
| CV9202 | mRNA | TAAs | I.D | RNActive, protamine | NSCLC | NCT03164772 | I/II | Immunotherapy | [ | |
| CV9104 | mRNA | TAAs | I.D | RNActive, protamine | Prostate carcinoma | NCT02140138 | II | Immunotherapy | ||
| HARE-40 | mRNA | HPV antigen CD40 | I.D | Naked RNA | HPV-driven squamous cell | BioNTech | NCT03418480 | I/II | Immunotherapy | |
| Lipo-MERIT | mRNA | TAAs: NYESO-1, MAGE-A3, tyrosinase, and TPTE | I.V | Lipo-MERIT, | Advanced melanoma | NCT02410733 | I | Immunotherapy | ||
| IVAC | mRNA | 3 TAAs selected from a warehouse and p53 RNA; Neo-Ag based on NGS screening | I.V | Lipo-MERIT, | TNBC | BioNTech | NCT02316457 | I | Immunotherapy | [ |
| RBL001/RBL002 | mRNA | TAAs | Ultrasound guided | Naked mRNA | Melanoma | NCT01684241 | I | Immunotherapy | ||
| IVAC MUTANOME | mRNA | Neo-Ag | Ultrasound guided | Naked mRNA | Melanoma | NCT02035956 | I | Immunotherapy | ||
| RO7198457 | mRNA | Neo-Ag | I.V | Naked mRNA | Melanoma; NSCLC; Bladder cancer | NCT03289962 | I | Immunotherapy | ||
| mRNA-1325 | mRNA | Zika virus antigen | I.D | LNPs | Zika virus | Moderna | NCT03014089 | I | Immunotherapy | |
| mRNA-1653 | mRNA | hMPV and hPIV type 3 vaccine | I.D | LNPs | hMPV and | NCT03392389 | I | Immunotherapy | ||
| VAL-506440 | mRNA | H10N8 antigen | I.D | LNPs | Influenza | Moderna | NCT03076385 | I | Immunotherapy | [ |
| VAL-339851 | mRNA | H7 influenza antigen | I.D | LNPs | Influenza | NCT03345043 | I | Immunotherapy | ||
| mRNA-1647/1443 | mRNA | CMV glycoprotein H pentamer complex | I.D | LNPs | CMV infection | NCT03382405 | I | Immunotherapy | [ | |
| mRNA-2416 | mRNA | Human OX40L | I.D | LNPs | Solid tumor malignancies or | NCT03323398 | I | Immunotherapy | ||
| mRNA-4157 | mRNA | Neo-Ag | Intratumoral | LNPs | Solid tumor | NCT03313778 | I | Immunotherapy | ||
| mRNA-4650 | mRNA | Neo-Ag | I.M | Naked mRNA | Melanoma; | NCT03480152 | I/II | Immunotherapy | [ | |
| mRNA-1388 | mRNA | VAL-181388 | I.M | LNPs | CHIKV | NCT03325075 | I | Immunotherapy | [ | |
| mRNA-2752 | mRNA | OX40L, IL-23, and IL-36γ | Intratumoral | LNPs | Solid tumor or lymphoma | Moderna/AstraZeneca | NCT03739931 | I | Immunotherapy | [ |
| iHIVARNA-01 | mRNA | Trimix (CD40L, CD70 and caTLR4 RNA—mRNA-transfected) | I.N | Naked mRNA | HIV infection | Hospital Clínic de | NCT02413645 | I | Immunotherapy | [ |
| mRNA | I.N | Naked mRNA | HIV infection | Erasmus Medical Center | NCT02888756 | II | Immunotherapy | [ | ||
| - | mRNA | CT7, MAGE-A3, and WT1 mRNA-electroporated LCs | I.D | DC-loaded mRNA | Malignant melanoma | Memorial Sloan | NCT01995708 | I | Immunotherapy | [ |
| - | mRNA | HIV-1 Gag- and Nef-transfected DCs | I.D | DC-loaded mRNA | HIV infection | Massachusetts | NCT00833781 | I/II | Immunotherapy | [ |
| - | mRNA | Neo-Ag | S.C | Naked mRNA | Solid tumor malignancies or | Changhai Hospital | NCT03468244 | N.A | Immunotherapy | [ |
| - | mRNA | TAA for melanoma (Melan-A, MAGE-A1, MAGE-A3, | I.D | Naked mRNA | Melanoma | University Hospital | NCT00204516 | I/II | Immunotherapy | [ |
| - | mRNA | TAA-transfected DC | I.D or I.N | DC-loaded mRNA | Malignant melanoma | Oslo University | NCT01278940 | I/II | Immunotherapy | [ |
| - | mRNA | I.D | DC-loaded mRNA | Prostate cancer | NCT01278914 | I/II | Immunotherapy | [ | ||
| AVX601 | Replicon | Alphavirus replicon vaccine expressing CMV | I.M or S.C | - | CMV | AlphaVax | NCT00439803 | I | Immunotherapy | [ |
| AVX502 | Replicon | Alphavirus replicon vaccine expressing an influenza | I.M or S.C | - | Influenza | NCT00440362; | I/II | Immunotherapy | ||
| AVX101 | Replicon | Alphavirus replicon, HIV-1 subtype C Gag vaccine | I.M or S.C | - | HIV infections | NCT00097838; NCT00063778 | I | Immunotherapy | [ | |
| AVX701 | Replicon | Alphavirus replicon encoding the protein | I.M or S.C | - | Colon cancer; | NCT01890213; | I/II | Immunotherapy | [ | |
| NY-ESO-1 | CRISPR-Cas9 | PD-1 and TCR | Ex vivo | Autologous T cells | Multiple myeloma; Synovial sarcoma; | University of Pennsylvania | NCT03399448 | I | Gene Editing | [ |
| CRISPR/TALEN-HPV E6/E7 | CRISPR/Cas9, TALEN | E6 and E7 | N.A | Plasmid DNA in gel | Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia | First Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-Sen University | NCT03057912 | I | Gene Editing | [ |
| CTX001 | CRISPR-Cas9 | BCL11A | Ex vivo | Modified CD34+ hHSPCs | ß-thalassemia | Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated | NCT03655678 | I/II | Gene Editing | [ |
| - | CRISPR-Cas9 | PD-1 and TCR | Ex vivo | CAR-T cells | Mesothelin positive multiple solid tumors | Chinese PLA General Hospital | NCT03545815 | I | Gene Editing | |
| - | CRISPR-Cas9 | CD19 and CD20 | Ex vivo | Dual specificity CAR-T cells | ß cell leukemia and lymphoma | NCT03398967 | I/II | Gene Editing | ||
| UCART019 | CRISPR-Cas9 | CD19 | Ex vivo | CAR-T cells | ß cell leukemia and lymphoma | NCT03166878 | I/II | Gene Editing | [ | |
| - | CRISPR-Cas9 | PD-1 | Ex vivo | Cytotoxic T lymphocytes | EBV-associated | Yang Yang | NCT03044743 | I/II | Gene Editing | [ |
| SB-728mR-HSPC | ZFN mRNA | CCR5 | Ex vivo (mRNA) | CD34+ hHSPCs | HIV | City of Hope Medical Center | NCT02500849 | I | Gene Editing | [ |
| SB-728mR-T | ZFN mRNA | CCR5 | Ex vivo (mRNA) | T cells | HIV | Sangamo Therapeutics | NCT02225665 | I/II | Gene Editing | [ |
CFTR—Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator; LNPs—Lipid nanoparticles; VEGF-A—Vascular endothelial growth factor A; I.D.—Intradermal; I.M.—Intramuscular; TAAs—Tumor-associated antigens; NSCLC—Non-small-cell lung carcinoma; HPV—Human Papillomavirus; I.N.—Intranodal; MAGE-A—Melanoma-associated antigen-A; TPTE—Putative tyrosine-protein phosphatase; I.V—Intravenous; Neo-Ag—Neo-antigen; NGS—Next-Generation Sequencing; TNBC—Triple-negative breast cancer; hMPV—Human metapneumovirus; hPIVs—Human parainfluenza viruses; CMV—Cytomegalovirus; GI—Gastrointestinal; HCC—Hepatocellular cancer; CHIKV—Chikungunya virus; IL—Interleukin; HIV—Human immunodeficiency virus; WT1—Wilms’ tumor 1; LCs—Langerhans cells; DC—Dendritic cell; S.C.—Subcutaneous; N.A—Not applicable; GP100—Glycoprotein 100; HA—Hemagglutinin; CRC—Colorectal cancer; PD-1—Programmed cell death protein 1; TLR—Toll-like receptor; BCL11A—B-cell lymphoma/leukemia 11A; hHSPCs—Human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells; CAR—Chimeric antigen receptor; EBV—Epstein-Barr virus; ZFN—Zinc-finger nucleases; CCR5—C-C Motif Chemokine Receptor 5.
Figure 7Scheme of the structure of SARS-CoV-2, with different viral proteins indicated.
Figure 8Actuation mechanism of the main mRNA vaccines against SARS-CoV-2. This process begins with the injection, in the patient’s deltoid muscle, of the mRNA usually encapsulated in lipid nanoparticles (LNPs). LNPs loaded with the mRNA encoding the SARS-CoV-2 spike glycoprotein (S), can reach the apical lymph nodes where they transfect dendritic cells. After entry and release of the cell endosome, the mRNA sequence is expressed and post-translational modifications occur. Subsequently, the S glycoprotein is transported and presented in the cell membrane of immune cells (antigen presenting cells). The S glycoproteins incites a specific cytotoxic and humoral immune response, leading to the production of antibodies against SARS-CoV-2, with the aim of achieving immunization against COVID-19.
LNP carriers of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines (lipidic constituents) [130,131].
| Lipid Name | Role | Abbreviation | Molar Lipid Ratios (%) (Ionizable Cationic Lipid:Neutral Lipid:Cholesterol:PEG-ylated Lipid) |
|---|---|---|---|
| BNT162b2 vaccine | |||
| 4-hydroxybutyl)azanediyl)bis(hexane-6,1-diyl)bis(2-hexyldecanoate | ionizable cationic lipid | ALC-0315 | 46.3:9.4:42.7:1.6 |
| 1,2-Distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine | helper lipid | DSPC | |
| cholesterol | helper lipid | Chol | |
| 2-[(polyethylene glycol)-2000]- | PEG-lipid | ALC-0159 | |
| mRNA-1273 vaccine | |||
| heptadecan-9-yl 8-((2-hydroxyethyl)[6-oxo-6-(undecyloxy)hexyl]amino)octanoate | ionizable cationic lipid | SM-102 | 50:10:38.5:1.5 |
| 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine | helper lipid | DSPC | |
| cholesterol | helper lipid | Chol | |
| 1,2-Dimyristoyl-rac-glycero-3-methoxypolyethylene glycol-2000 | PEG-lipid | PEG2000-DMG | |
mRNA vaccines and new candidates for COVID-19 [150].
| Name | Therapetic Modality | Protein Target | Administration Method | Delivery Vehicle | Developer | ClinicalTrials.gov Identifer, EU Clinical Trials Register or Chinese Clinical Trial Register | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mRNA-1273 | mRNA | Spike Glycoprotein | Intramuscular | LNP | Moderna/NIAID | EUCTR2021-002327-38-NL | IV |
| BNT162b2 | mRNA | RBD/Spike Glycoprotein | Intramuscular | LNP | Pfizer/BioNTech + Fosun Pharma | NCT04760132 | IV |
| CVnCoV Vaccine | mRNA | Spike Glycoprotein | Intramuscular | LNP | CureVac AG | NCT04674189 | III |
| ARCT-021 | mRNA | Spike Glycoprotein | Intramuscular | LNP | Arcturus Therapeutics | NCT04668339 | II |
| LNP-nCoVsaRNA | mRNA | Spike Glycoprotein | Intramuscular | LNP | Imperial College London | ISRCTN17072692 | I |
| SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine (ARCoV) | mRNA | RBD | Intramuscular | LNP | AMS/Walvax Biotechnology and Suzhou Abogen Biosciences | NCT04847102 | III |
| ChulaCov19 mRNA vaccine | mRNA | Spike Glycoprotein | Intramuscular | LNP | Chulalongkorn University | NCT04566276 | I |
| PTX-COVID19-B, mRNA vaccine | mRNA | Spike Glycoprotein | Intramuscular | LNP | Providence therapeutics | NCT04765436 | I |
| saRNA formulated in a NLC | mRNA | - | - | NLC | Infectious Disease Research Institute/Amyris, Inc. | - | Pre-Clinical |
| LNP-encapsulated mRNA encoding S | mRNA | Spike Glycoprotein | - | LNP | Max-Planck-Institute of Colloids and Interfaces | - | Pre-Clinical |
| Self-amplifying RNA | mRNA | - | - | - | Gennova | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | Selcuk University | - | Pre-Clinical |
| LNP-mRNA | mRNA | - | - | LNP | Translate Bio/Sanofi Pasteur | - | Pre-Clinical |
| LNP-mRNA | mRNA | - | - | LNP | CanSino Biologics/Precision NanoSystems | - | Pre-Clinical |
| LNP-encapsulated mRNA cocktail encoding VLP | mRNA | - | - | LNP | Fudan University/Shanghai JiaoTong University/RNACure Biopharma | - | Pre-Clinical |
| LNP-encapsulated mRNA encoding RBD | mRNA | RBD | - | LNP | Fudan University/Shanghai JiaoTong University/RNACure Biopharma | - | Pre-Clinical |
| Replicating Defective SARS-CoV-2 derived RNAs | mRNA | - | - | - | Centro Nacional Biotecnología (CNB-CSIC), Spain | - | Pre-Clinical |
| LNP-encapsulated mRNA | mRNA | - | - | LNP | University of Tokyo/Daiichi-Sankyo | - | Pre-Clinical |
| Liposome-encapsulated mRNA | mRNA | - | - | LNP | BIOCAD | - | Pre-Clinical |
| Several mRNA candidates | mRNA | - | - | - | RNAimmune, Inc. | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | FBRI SRC VB VECTOR, Rospotrebnadzor, Koltsovo | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | China CDC/Tongji University/Stermina | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA in an intranasal delivery system | mRNA | - | Intranasal | - | eTheRNA | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | Greenlight Biosciences | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | IDIBAPS-Hospital Clinic, Spain | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | Providence Therapeutics | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | Cell Tech Pharmed | - | Pre-Clinical |
| mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | ReNAP Co. | - | Pre-Clinical |
| D614G variant LNP-encapsulated mRNA | mRNA | - | - | LNP | Globe Biotech Ltd. | - | Pre-Clinical |
| Encapsulated mRNA | mRNA | - | - | - | CEA | - | Pre-Clinical |
LNPs—Lipid nanoparticles; NIAID—National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; RBD—Receptor-binding domain; AMS—Academy of Military Science.
Figure 9Schematic of CRISPR-Cas9-mediated genome editing. A CRISPR-Cas9 endonuclease is directed to a DNA sequence by means of a single guide RNA sequence (sgRNA), resulting in double strand cleavage. Subsequently they are repaired by non-homologous final union (NHEJ) or homology-directed repair (HDR). NHEJ repair provides errors, often leads to insertion or deletion mutations, which can lead to genome instability. Alternatively, in the presence of an exogenous donor DNA model, it can be repaired through error-free HDR, projecting precise DNA changes.