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Programmed Instability of Ligand Conjugation Manifold for Efficient Hepatocyte Delivery of Therapeutic Oligonucleotides.

Chisato TeradaFumito WadaMei UchidaYukari YasutomiKaho OhSeiya KawamotoYukina KayabaAsako YamayoshiMariko Harada-ShibaSatoshi ObikaTsuyoshi Yamamoto
Published in: Nucleic acid therapeutics (2021)
Ligand-targeted drug delivery (LTDD) has gained more attention in the field of nucleic acid therapeutics. To further elicit the potential of therapeutic oligonucleotides by means of LTDD, we newly developed (R)- and (S)-3-amino-1,2-propanediol (APD) manifold for ligand conjugation. N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc)/asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPr) system has been shown to be a powerful and robust paradigm of LTDD. Our novel APD-based GalNAc (GalNAcAPD) was shown to have intrinsic chemical instability that could play a role in better manipulation of active drug release. The APD manifold also enables facile production of conjugates through an on-support ligand cluster synthesis. We showed in a series of in vivo studies that while the knockdown activity of antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) bearing 5'-GalNAcAPD was comparable to the conventional hydroxy-L-prolinol-linked GalNAc (GalNAcHP), 3'-GalNAcAPD elicited ASO activity by more than twice as much as the conventional 3'-GalNAcHP. This was ascribed partly to the GalNAcAPD's ideal susceptibility to nucleolytic digestion, which is expected to facilitate cytosolic internalization of ASO drugs. Moreover, an in vivo/ex vivo imaging study visualized the enhancement effect of monoantennary GalNAcAPD on liver localization of ASOs. This versatile manifold with chemical and biological instability would benefit therapeutic oligonucleotides that target both the liver and extrahepatic tissues.
Keyphrases
  • nucleic acid
  • drug delivery
  • drug release
  • cancer therapy
  • high resolution
  • gene expression
  • working memory
  • small molecule
  • quantum dots
  • highly efficient
  • risk assessment
  • drug induced
  • liver injury