作者
Kirk Brown,Jayaprakash K. Nair,Maja M. Janas,Yesseinia Angleró-Rodríguez,Lan Dang,Haiyan Peng,Christopher S. Theile,Elena Castellanos-Rizaldos,Christopher R. Brown,Donald J. Foster,Jeffrey C. Kurz,Jeffrey C. Allen,Rajanikanth J Maganti,Jing Li,Shigeo Matsuda,Matthew Stricos,Tyler Chickering,Michelle Jung,Kelly Wassarman,Jeff Rollins,Lauren Blair Woods,Alex Kelin,Dale C. Guenther,Melissa W. Mobley,John R. Petrulis,Robin McDougall,Timothy Racie,Jessica Bombardier,Diana Cha,Saket Agarwal,Lei Johnson,Yongfeng Jiang,Scott Lentini,Jason A. Gilbert,Tuyen Nguyen,Samantha Chigas,Sarah LeBlanc,Urjana Poreci,Anne Kasper,Arlin B. Rogers,Saeho Chong,Wendell Davis,Jessica E. Sutherland,Adam Castoreno,Stuart Milstein,Mark K. Schlegel,Ivan Zlatev,Klaus Charissé,Mark Keating,Muthiah Manoharan,Kevin Fitzgerald,Jing‐Tao Wu,Martin A. Maier,Vasant Jadhav
摘要
Therapeutics based on short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) delivered to hepatocytes have been approved, but new delivery solutions are needed to target additional organs. Here we show that conjugation of 2'-O-hexadecyl (C16) to siRNAs enables safe, potent and durable silencing in the central nervous system (CNS), eye and lung in rodents and non-human primates with broad cell type specificity. We show that intrathecally or intracerebroventricularly delivered C16-siRNAs were active across CNS regions and cell types, with sustained RNA interference (RNAi) activity for at least 3 months. Similarly, intravitreal administration to the eye or intranasal administration to the lung resulted in a potent and durable knockdown. The preclinical efficacy of an siRNA targeting the amyloid precursor protein was evaluated through intracerebroventricular dosing in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease, resulting in amelioration of physiological and behavioral deficits. Altogether, C16 conjugation of siRNAs has the potential for safe therapeutic silencing of target genes outside the liver with infrequent dosing.