Toxicity of Antisense Oligonucleotides is Determined by the Synergistic Interplay of Chemical Modifications and Nucleotide Sequences, Not by Either Factor Alone.
Jaspreet Bhamra, Mahati Krishna, George Samaan, Sankha Pattanayak, Swagatam Mukhopadhyay
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) offer a promising therapeutic approach for precise RNA-level gene modulation. Despite advancements in chemical modifications to enhance stability and pharmacokinetics, ASOs still face significant challenges, including liver, immunological, renal, and neurological toxicities, potentially leading to high preclinical failure rates. Current oligonucleotide-based drug optimization strategies to overcome such issues often rely on applying a few commonly used chemical architectures (patterns of linker, sugar, or base modifications), which are conventional in the field, or engaging in expensive and time-consuming trial-and-error screening processes involving both sequence changes and positional chemical modifications. These traditional approaches treat nucleotide sequences ("sequence") and sugar/linkage modification chemistries ("chemistry") as independent contributors to toxicity. However, ample evidence in the literature shows that even minor changes in either sequence or chemical modifications can drastically impact toxicity, suggesting an inseparable synergistic relationship between sequence and chemistry. In support of this sequence-chemistry collusion thesis, this manuscript presents a survey of the systemic toxicity potential of several chemically modified gapmer ASOs by investigating the impact of modifying sugar and backbone chemistries on ASO-induced hepatotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, and immune/inflammatory responses. The data unequivocally demonstrate that ASO toxicity is strongly influenced by the interplay between nucleotide sequence, chemical modifications, and the specific position context of those modifications, highlighting the critical need to rationally engineer the optimal sequence and chemical composition to develop safe and active ASO drug candidates instead of discovering suboptimal ASOs through trial-and-error screening campaigns.
期刊介绍:
ChemBioChem (Impact Factor 2018: 2.641) publishes important breakthroughs across all areas at the interface of chemistry and biology, including the fields of chemical biology, bioorganic chemistry, bioinorganic chemistry, synthetic biology, biocatalysis, bionanotechnology, and biomaterials. It is published on behalf of Chemistry Europe, an association of 16 European chemical societies, and supported by the Asian Chemical Editorial Society (ACES).