| Literature DB >> 35056696 |
Maher M Aljohani1,2, Dana Cialla-May1,3, Jürgen Popp1,3,4, Raja Chinnappan5, Khaled Al-Kattan6, Mohammed Zourob5.
Abstract
Aptamers are RNA/DNA oligonucleotide molecules that specifically bind to a targeted complementary molecule. As potential recognition elements with promising diagnostic and therapeutic applications, aptamers, such as monoclonal antibodies, could provide many treatment and diagnostic options for blood diseases. Aptamers present several superior features over antibodies, including a simple in vitro selection and production, ease of modification and conjugation, high stability, and low immunogenicity. Emerging as promising alternatives to antibodies, aptamers could overcome the present limitations of monoclonal antibody therapy to provide novel diagnostic, therapeutic, and preventive treatments for blood diseases. Researchers in several biomedical areas, such as biomarker detection, diagnosis, imaging, and targeted therapy, have widely investigated aptamers, and several aptamers have been developed over the past two decades. One of these is the pegaptanib sodium injection, an aptamer-based therapeutic that functions as an anti-angiogenic medicine, and it is the first aptamer approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for therapeutic use. Several other aptamers are now in clinical trials. In this review, we highlight the current state of aptamers in the clinical trial program and introduce some promising aptamers currently in pre-clinical development for blood diseases.Entities:
Keywords: aptamers; blood diseases; diagnostic; therapeutic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35056696 PMCID: PMC8778139 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27020383
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Schematic representation of the protein-based SELEX process used to select an aptamer. The conventional SELEX method is typically carried out using purified target molecules and includes incubating the target molecule. This cycle has to be performed in several rounds, and the binding affinity is monitored until significant binding affinity is reached. High-affinity aptamers for the ligands are isolated and identified by classical cloning and the sequencing results using bioinformatics analysis. The aptamer selection process is followed by selectivity study to the specific target molecule, and the thus identified molecules are used for potential diagnostic or therapeutic applications.
Comparison of the critical properties of antibodies and aptamers.
| Monoclonal Antibodies | Aptamers |
|---|---|
| Large molecule (IGG monoclonal antibody approximately 150 kDa) | Small molecule (10–100 times smaller than antibodies) |
| Produced biologically (in vivo) in animal house facilities or reactors | Produced chemically (in vitro) |
| High cost of synthesis | Low cost of synthesis, |
| Widely distributed technologies (widely used) | Limited distribution of technologies |
| Difficult to modify | Easy to modify by simple bioconjugate chemistry |
| Contamination by viral or bacterial during manufacturing process can affect product quality | Chemical/lab manufacturing process carries no risk of biological contamination |
| High batch-to-batch variation | Low batch-to-batch variation |
| Clonal variation | No clonal variation |
| Long half-life in vivo (less susceptible to serum degradation and renal filtration) | Short half-life in vivo (susceptible to serum degradation and renal filtration) |
| Often immunogenic | Less immunogenic |
| Thermally unstable | Thermally stable |
| Limited shelf life | Long shelf life |
| Poor internalization into cells/tumors | Efficient cellular internalization |
| Less susceptible to nuclease degradation, rapid elimination from plasma by renal filtration | Susceptible to nuclease degradation, rapid elimination from plasma by renal filtration |
| Antibody conjugation with one type of signaling or binding molecule, such as organic dyes, fluorescent proteins, colored particles, or enzymes, is typically achieved after antibody formation. | Aptamers can be easily conjugated to different secondary reagents such as small nanoparticles, chemotherapeutic drugs, toxins, enzymes, radionuclides, small interfering RNAs and microRNAs, etc., often during aptamer synthesis, secondary reagents. Conjugation can be readily introduced during synthesis |
| Limited ability to utilize negative selection pressure | Ability for a counter (negative) selection |
Figure 2(a) Hybridoma technology is the fundamental method for producing identical antibodies (known as mAbs) specific to antigens of interest. It involves injecting animals (usually mice or rats) with an antigen that provokes an immune response for mAb production. This approach presents ethical considerations and restrictions related to infectious risks associated with animal use. Recombinant mAb technology is an essential alternative to using animals for mAb generation and production [2]. (b) SELEX technology selects specific aptamers from random DNA, RNA, or peptide libraries without sacrificing animals.
Summary of different pre-clinical and clinical-stage aptamers for blood diseases.
| Target | Name of | Type of Aptamer | Hematological Indication | Phase of Testing | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nucleolin | AS1411 aptamer (AGRO100, later renamed AS1411 then ACT-GRO-777) | 26-ntG-rich sequence | Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) | Phase II clinical trials in a combination therapy for patients with myeloid leukemia; ClinicalTrials.gov, #NCT00512083 | [ |
| CD33; | Anti-CD33 aptamer | DNA aptamer | AML | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept) are binding and being internalized into CD33-positive myeloid cell lines, carrier of chemotherapeutic drugs | [ |
| CD30; | Anti-CD30 aptamer | ssDNA aptamer | Hodgkin’s lymphoma (HL) tumor cells | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept) | [ |
| B-cell activating factor receptor (BAFF-R) | BAFF-R-specific | RNA aptamers a | BAFF-R-positive lymphoma cells, such as non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL) | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept); | [ |
| Stromal cell-derived | NOX-A12 | 45-nt RNA, | Multiple myeloma (MM), | Phase II clinical trials in a combination therapy for MM, | [ |
| CD38; | CD38-specific ssDNA aptamer | ssDNA | MM | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept); | [ |
| Immunoglobulin heavy mu chain (IGHM) | TD05 aptamer | ssDNA | Burkitt’s lymphoma | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept); | [ |
| Membrane receptor, protein tyrosine kinase 7 (PTK7) tyrosine | Sgc8 aptamer | ssDNA | T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept); | [ |
| CD117 (c-Kit), transmembrane receptor | CD117-specific ssDNA aptamers | ssDNA | AML | Proof of concept; | [ |
| von Willebrand factor (VWF) | ARC1779 | ARC1779 A, | von Willebrand factor-related platelet function disorders; | Phase II clinical trials for cerebral microembolism in patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy, | [ |
| Factor IXa | REG1 System/ | System consists of | Antithrombotic drug | Phase III clinical trial, | ClinicalTrials.gov |
| Tissue factor (TF) | BAX499/ | -32 nucleotides | Hemophilia | Phase 1; first-in-human and proof-of-mechanism study in hemophilia patients, | [ |
| P-selectin, cell adhesion molecule | Anti-P-selectin | ARC5690: -33-mer oligonucleotide- a 3′-inverted 2′-deoxy-thymidine—a 5′-40 kDa PEG | Sickle cell disease (SCD) | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept); | [ |
| Complement C5 | C5-specific aptamer (ARC1905, also known as Zimura) | 38-mer 2′F RNA aptamer, | Potential for complement-related diseases, such as paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) | Phase II/III clinical trials in age-related macular degeneration (AMD) | [ |
| Hepcidin peptide | NOX-H94, (Spiegelmer® lexaptepid pegol) | 44-nt RNA | Anemia of chronic disease (ACD) | Phase II clinical trials, | ClinicalTrials.gov |
| Human FXII | Anti-FXII aptamer | RNA Aptamer | Thrombosis | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept); | [ |
| Direct oral anticoagulants (dabigatran) | DGB-1, DBG-2, DBG-4, and DBG-5 | ssDNA aptamers | Direct oral anticoagulants (dabigatran) | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept) for monitoring direct oral anticoagulants (dabigatran) | [ |
| Refrigerated platelets | Anti-VWF aptamer | von Willebrand factor | Refrigerated platelets | Pre-clinical studies (proof of concept) for the use of ARC1779 to refrigerated platelets; improves post-transfusion recovery and preserves the long-term hemostatic function of refrigerated platelets | [ |
| Serum and plasma in aplastic anemia (AA), | SOMAscan | RNA-sequencing and | AA, | Proof of concept to determine the true proteomic of serum and plasma in AA patients before and after therapy | [ |
Figure 3Aptamers in the therapeutics and diagnostics pipeline for blood diseases.