| Literature DB >> 35052730 |
Andreas Ouranidis1,2, Theofanis Vavilis3, Evdokia Mandala4, Christina Davidopoulou1, Eleni Stamoula5, Catherine K Markopoulou1, Anna Karagianni1, Kyriakos Kachrimanis1.
Abstract
In the quest for a formidable weapon against the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, mRNA therapeutics have stolen the spotlight. mRNA vaccines are a prime example of the benefits of mRNA approaches towards a broad array of clinical entities and druggable targets. Amongst these benefits is the rapid cycle "from design to production" of an mRNA product compared to their peptide counterparts, the mutability of the production line should another target be chosen, the side-stepping of safety issues posed by DNA therapeutics being permanently integrated into the transfected cell's genome and the controlled precision over the translated peptides. Furthermore, mRNA applications are versatile: apart from vaccines it can be used as a replacement therapy, even to create chimeric antigen receptor T-cells or reprogram somatic cells. Still, the sudden global demand for mRNA has highlighted the shortcomings in its industrial production as well as its formulation, efficacy and applicability. Continuous, smart mRNA manufacturing 4.0 technologies have been recently proposed to address such challenges. In this work, we examine the lab and upscaled production of mRNA therapeutics, the mRNA modifications proposed that increase its efficacy and lower its immunogenicity, the vectors available for delivery and the stability considerations concerning long-term storage.Entities:
Keywords: CAR T-cell; formulation; lipid nanoparticle; mRNA; mRNA vaccines; nanomedicine; pharma industry 4.0; protein replacement; storage; therapeutics
Year: 2021 PMID: 35052730 PMCID: PMC8773365 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10010050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Main applications of mRNA in therapeutics broken down in the three major categories of replacement therapy, cell therapies and vaccines.
Figure 2Production of mRNA on an industrial scale starting from bacterial transfection with the vector containing the DNA from which mRNA will be synthesized, down to its formulation with a delivery vector and long-term storage.
Figure 3Process flow diagram of the Pharma 4.0, GMP compliant mRNA production (a) perfusion bacterial culture upstream; (b) cell lysis and plasmid purification; (c) linearization and in vitro transcription; (d) lipid nanoparticle microfluidic formulation [43].
Figure 4Structural elements of mRNA, their role and modifications impacting mRNA viability as a therapeutic. The main role of each element (5′ cap, 5′ and 3′ UTRs, ORF, Poly(A) tail) is given by a square bullet, whereas the modifications pertaining to its modification is given with checkmarks.