| Literature DB >> 36146858 |
Abstract
Three types of oligonucleotide-based medicines are under clinical development for the treatment of chronic HBV infection. Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) and synthetic interfering RNA (siRNA) are designed to degrade HBV mRNA, and nucleic acid polymers (NAPs) stop the assembly and secretion of HBV subviral particles. Extensive clinical development of ASOs and siRNA for a variety of liver diseases has established a solid understanding of their pharmacodynamics, accumulation in different tissue types in the liver, pharmacological effects, off-target effects and how chemical modifications and delivery approaches affect these parameters. These effects are highly conserved for all ASO and siRNA used in human studies to date. The clinical assessment of several ASO and siRNA compounds in chronic HBV infection in recent years is complicated by the different delivery approaches used. Moreover, these assessments have not considered the large clinical database of ASO/siRNA function in other liver diseases and known off target effects in other viral infections. The goal of this review is to summarize the current understanding of ASO/siRNA/NAP pharmacology and integrate these concepts into current clinical results for these compounds in the treatment of chronic HBV infection.Entities:
Keywords: ASO; HBsAg; NAP; functional cure; immunostimulation; siRNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36146858 PMCID: PMC9502277 DOI: 10.3390/v14092052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.818
Figure 1Relationships between known oligonucleotide classes and their pharmacological activities. Synthetic oligonucleotides are indicated in blue with therapeutic activity in bold. Non-immune pharmacological effects are indicated in green. Immunostimulatory effects are indicated in orange.
Figure 2Impact of oligonucleotide modification on pharmacological effects. Positive effects are indicated in green, modifications with the potential to alter effects are indicated in orange. Negative effects are indicated in red.
Figure 3The balance between siRNA modification RISC loading and TLR3 recognition.
Figure 4Impact of oligonucleotide uptake in the liver versus immunostimulatory impact. A map of the most prevalent liver cell types is at upper left. Relative immunoreactivity to oligonucleotides via TLR3/7/8 and 9 is indicated at upper right. Cell uptake with oligonucleotides are indicated as unconjugated ASOs (middle left), LNP formulation siRNA (lower left) and GalNAc conjugated-ASO or siRNA (lower right). Stronger cellular accumulation is indicated by darker shading.
Suitability of animal models of HBV infection for evaluating oligonucleotide-based therapies.
| Model | SVP Production | Genetic Diversity | Rapid Turnover of cccDNA | TLR9 Activity | TLR3 Reactivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | LDL-based | Present | Present | Present | Present |
| Transgenic mice | LDL metabolism opposite to humans | None | Present but turnover unknown | Yes but human and rodent CpG sequences differ | Stronger vs. primate |
| AAV/HDI-mice | LDL metabolism opposite to humans | None | Present but turnover unknown | Yes but human and rodent CpG sequences differ | Stronger vs. primate |
| Scid-Hu mice | SVP production is attenuated | Present | Yes | Yes but human and rodent CpG sequences differ | Stronger vs. primate |
| Ducks | LDL metabolism similar to humans | Present | Yes | Yes but via altered reactivity by TLR15 | Similar to primate |
| Woodchucks | LDL metabolism opposite to humans | Present | Yes | Yes but human and rodent CpG sequences differ | Similar to primate |
Figure 5Relative impact on HBsAg response with oligonucleotide-based medicine in human chronic HBV infection.