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From bench to bedside: Improving the clinical safety of GalNAc-siRNA conjugates using seed-pairing destabilization.

Mark K SchlegelMaja M JanasYongfeng JiangJoseph D BarryWendell DavisSaket AgarwalDaniel BermanChristopher R BrownAdam CastorenoSarah LeBlancAbigail LiebowTara MayoStuart MilsteinTuyen NguyenSvetlana Shulga-MorskayaSarah HydeSally SchofieldJohn SzetoLauren Blair WoodsVedat O YilmazMuthiah ManoharanMartin EgliKlaus CharisséLaura Sepp-LorenzinoPatrick HaslettKevin FitzgeraldVasant JadhavMartin A Maier
Published in: Nucleic acids research (2022)
Preclinical mechanistic studies have pointed towards RNA interference-mediated off-target effects as a major driver of hepatotoxicity for GalNAc-siRNA conjugates. Here, we demonstrate that a single glycol nucleic acid or 2'-5'-RNA modification can substantially reduce small interfering RNA (siRNA) seed-mediated binding to off-target transcripts while maintaining on-target activity. In siRNAs with established hepatotoxicity driven by off-target effects, these novel designs with seed-pairing destabilization, termed enhanced stabilization chemistry plus (ESC+), demonstrated a substantially improved therapeutic window in rats. In contrast, siRNAs thermally destabilized to a similar extent by the incorporation of multiple DNA nucleotides in the seed region showed little to no improvement in rat safety suggesting that factors in addition to global thermodynamics play a role in off-target mitigation. We utilized the ESC+ strategy to improve the safety of ALN-HBV, which exhibited dose-dependent, transient and asymptomatic alanine aminotransferase elevations in healthy volunteers. The redesigned ALN-HBV02 (VIR-2218) showed improved specificity with comparable on-target activity and the program was reintroduced into clinical development.
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