A programmable dual-targeting siRNA scaffold supports potent two-gene modulation in the central nervous system

Author:

Belgrad Jillian1ORCID,Tang Qi1ORCID,Hildebrand Sam1ORCID,Summers Ashley1,Sapp Ellen2,Echeverria Dimas1ORCID,O’Reilly Dan1ORCID,Luu Eric1,Bramato Brianna1,Allen Sarah1,Cooper David1,Alterman Julia1ORCID,Yamada Ken1ORCID,Aronin Neil13,DiFiglia Marian2,Khvorova Anastasia14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. RNA Therapeutics Institute, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School ; Worcester , MA , USA

2. Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital ; Charlestown, MA , USA

3. Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School ; Worcester , MA , USA

4. Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School ; Worcester , MA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Divalent short-interfering RNA (siRNA) holds promise as a therapeutic approach allowing for the sequence-specific modulation of a target gene within the central nervous system (CNS). However, an siRNA modality capable of simultaneously modulating gene pairs would be invaluable for treating complex neurodegenerative disorders, where more than one pathway contributes to pathogenesis. Currently, the parameters and scaffold considerations for multi-targeting nucleic acid modalities in the CNS are undefined. Here, we propose a framework for designing unimolecular ‘dual-targeting’ divalent siRNAs capable of co-silencing two genes in the CNS. We systematically adjusted the original CNS-active divalent siRNA and identified that connecting two sense strands 3′ and 5′ through an intra-strand linker enabled a functional dual-targeting scaffold, greatly simplifying the synthetic process. Our findings demonstrate that the dual-targeting siRNA supports at least two months of maximal distribution and target silencing in the mouse CNS. The dual-targeting divalent siRNA is highly programmable, enabling simultaneous modulation of two different disease-relevant gene pairs (e.g. Huntington's disease: MSH3 and HTT; Alzheimer's disease: APOE and JAK1) with similar potency to a mixture of single-targeting divalent siRNAs against each gene. This work enhances the potential for CNS modulation of disease-related gene pairs using a unimolecular siRNA.

Funder

CHDI Foundation

National Institutes of Health

NIH

Dake family fund

Hereditary Disease Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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