作者
Scarlett J. Barker,Mai B. Thayer,Chaeyoung Kim,David Tatarakis,Matthew Simon,Rebekah Dial,Christian Nilewski,Robert C. Wells,Yinhan Zhou,Megan E. Afetian,Padma Akkapeddi,Alfred E. Chappell,Kylie S. Chew,Johann Chow,Allisa Clemens,Claire B. Discenza,Jason C. Dugas,Chrissa A. Dwyer,Timothy Earr,Connie Ha,Yvonne S. Ho,David Huynh,Edwin I. Lozano,Srini Jayaraman,Wanda Kwan,Cathal Mahon,Michelle E. Pizzo,Yaneth Robles‐Colmenares,Elysia Roche,Laura Sanders,Alexander Stergioulis,Raymond K. Tong,Hai L. Tran,Y. Joy Yu Zuchero,Anthony A. Estrada,Kapil Gadkar,Christopher M. Koth,Pascal E. Sanchez,Robert G. Thorne,Ryan J. Watts,Thomas Sandmann,Lesley A. Kane,Frank Rigo,Mark S. Dennis,Joseph W. Lewcock,Sarah L. DeVos
摘要
Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) are promising therapeutics for treating various neurological disorders. However, ASOs are unable to readily cross the mammalian blood-brain barrier (BBB) and therefore need to be delivered intrathecally to the central nervous system (CNS). Here, we engineered a human transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1) binding molecule, the oligonucleotide transport vehicle (OTV), to transport a tool ASO across the BBB in human TfR knockin (TfR mu/hu KI) mice and nonhuman primates. Intravenous injection and systemic delivery of OTV to TfR mu/hu KI mice resulted in sustained knockdown of the ASO target RNA, Malat1 , across multiple mouse CNS regions and cell types, including endothelial cells, neurons, astrocytes, microglia, and oligodendrocytes. In addition, systemic delivery of OTV enabled Malat1 RNA knockdown in mouse quadriceps and cardiac muscles, which are difficult to target with oligonucleotides alone. Systemically delivered OTV enabled a more uniform ASO biodistribution profile in the CNS of TfR mu/hu KI mice and greater knockdown of Malat1 RNA compared with a bivalent, high-affinity TfR antibody. In cynomolgus macaques, an OTV directed against MALAT1 displayed robust ASO delivery to the primate CNS and enabled more uniform biodistribution and RNA target knockdown compared with intrathecal dosing of the same unconjugated ASO. Our data support systemically delivered OTV as a potential platform for delivering therapeutic ASOs across the BBB.