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    Date Issued2019 (2)2018 (4)2017 (1)AuthorEcheverria, Dimas (7)Haraszti, Reka A. (7)Khvorova, Anastasia (7)
    Roux, Loic (7)
    Alterman, Julia F. (5)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationProgram in Molecular Medicine (7)RNA Therapeutics Institute (7)Department of Medicine (5)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Translational Science Program (2)Department of Animal Medicine (1)View MoreDocument TypeJournal Article (7)KeywordGenetics and Genomics (5)Nucleic Acids, Nucleotides, and Nucleosides (5)Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology (4)Therapeutics (4)Biochemistry (3)View MoreJournalNucleic acids research (3)Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy (2)Nature biotechnology (2)

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    A divalent siRNA chemical scaffold for potent and sustained modulation of gene expression throughout the central nervous system

    Alterman, Julia F.; Godinho, Bruno M. D. C.; Hassler, Matthew R.; Ferguson, Chantal M.; Echeverria, Dimas; Sapp, Ellen; Haraszti, Reka A.; Coles, Andrew H.; Conroy, Faith; Miller, Rachael; et al. (2019-08-02)
    Sustained silencing of gene expression throughout the brain using small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) has not been achieved. Here we describe an siRNA architecture, divalent siRNA (di-siRNA), that supports potent, sustained gene silencing in the central nervous system (CNS) of mice and nonhuman primates following a single injection into the cerebrospinal fluid. Di-siRNAs are composed of two fully chemically modified, phosphorothioate-containing siRNAs connected by a linker. In mice, di-siRNAs induced the potent silencing of huntingtin, the causative gene in Huntington's disease, reducing messenger RNA and protein throughout the brain. Silencing persisted for at least 6 months, with the degree of gene silencing correlating to levels of guide strand tissue accumulation. In cynomolgus macaques, a bolus injection of di-siRNA showed substantial distribution and robust silencing throughout the brain and spinal cord without detectable toxicity and with minimal off-target effects. This siRNA design may enable RNA interference-based gene silencing in the CNS for the treatment of neurological disorders.
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    Hydrophobicity drives the systemic distribution of lipid-conjugated siRNAs via lipid transport pathways

    Osborn, Maire F.; Coles, Andrew H.; Biscans, Annabelle; Haraszti, Reka A.; Roux, Loic; Davis, Sarah M.; Ly, Socheata; Echeverria, Dimas; Hassler, Matthew R.; Godinho, Bruno M. D. C.; et al. (2019-02-20)
    Efficient delivery of therapeutic RNA beyond the liver is the fundamental obstacle preventing its clinical utility. Lipid conjugation increases plasma half-life and enhances tissue accumulation and cellular uptake of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs). However, the mechanism relating lipid hydrophobicity, structure, and siRNA pharmacokinetics is unclear. Here, using a diverse panel of biologically occurring lipids, we show that lipid conjugation directly modulates siRNA hydrophobicity. When administered in vivo, highly hydrophobic lipid-siRNAs preferentially and spontaneously associate with circulating low-density lipoprotein (LDL), while less lipophilic lipid-siRNAs bind to high-density lipoprotein (HDL). Lipid-siRNAs are targeted to lipoprotein receptor-enriched tissues, eliciting significant mRNA silencing in liver (65%), adrenal gland (37%), ovary (35%), and kidney (78%). Interestingly, siRNA internalization may not be completely driven by lipoprotein endocytosis, but the extent of siRNA phosphorothioate modifications may also be a factor. Although biomimetic lipoprotein nanoparticles have been explored for the enhancement of siRNA delivery, our findings suggest that hydrophobic modifications can be leveraged to incorporate therapeutic siRNA into endogenous lipid transport pathways without the requirement for synthetic formulation.
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    RNAi modulation of placental sFLT1 for the treatment of preeclampsia

    Turanov, Anton A.; Hassler, Matthew R.; Ashar-Patel, Ami; Alterman, Julia F.; Coles, Andrew H.; Haraszti, Reka A.; Roux, Loic; Godinho, Bruno M. D. C.; Echeverria, Dimas; Karumanchi, S. Ananth; et al. (2018-11-19)
    Preeclampsia is a placentally induced hypertensive disorder of pregnancy that is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality to mothers and fetuses. Clinical manifestations of preterm preeclampsia result from excess circulating soluble vascular endothelial growth factor receptor FLT1 (sFLT1 or sVEGFR1) of placental origin. Here we identify short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) that selectively silence the three sFLT1 mRNA isoforms primarily responsible for placental overexpression of sFLT1 without reducing levels of full-length FLT1 mRNA. Full chemical stabilization in the context of hydrophobic modifications enabled productive siRNA accumulation in the placenta (up to 7% of injected dose) and reduced circulating sFLT1 in pregnant mice (up to 50%). In a baboon preeclampsia model, a single dose of siRNAs suppressed sFLT1 overexpression and clinical signs of preeclampsia. Our results demonstrate RNAi-based extrahepatic modulation of gene expression with nonformulated siRNAs in nonhuman primates and establish a path toward a new treatment paradigm for patients with preterm preeclampsia.
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    Hydrophobicity of Lipid-Conjugated siRNAs Predicts Productive Loading to Small Extracellular Vesicles

    Biscans, Annabelle; Haraszti, Reka A.; Echeverria, Dimas; Miller, Rachael; Didiot, Marie C.; Nikan, Mehran; Roux, Loic; Aronin, Neil; Khvorova, Anastasia (2018-06-06)
    Small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) show promise as natural nano-devices for delivery of therapeutic RNA, but efficient loading of therapeutic RNA remains a challenge. We have recently shown that the attachment of cholesterol to small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) enables efficient and productive loading into sEVs. Here, we systematically explore the ability of lipid conjugates-fatty acids, sterols, and vitamins-to load siRNAs into sEVs and support gene silencing in primary neurons. Hydrophobicity of the conjugated siRNAs defined loading efficiency and the silencing activity of siRNA-sEVs complexes. Vitamin-E-conjugated siRNA supported the best loading into sEVs and productive RNA delivery to neurons.
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    Optimized Cholesterol-siRNA Chemistry Improves Productive Loading onto Extracellular Vesicles

    Haraszti, Reka A.; Miller, Rachael; Didiot, Marie C.; Biscans, Annabelle; Alterman, Julia F.; Hassler, Matthew R.; Roux, Loic; Echeverria, Dimas; Sapp, Ellen; DiFiglia, Marian; et al. (2018-03-01)
    Extracellular vesicles are promising delivery vesicles for therapeutic RNAs. Small interfering RNA (siRNA) conjugation to cholesterol enables efficient and reproducible loading of extracellular vesicles with the therapeutic cargo. siRNAs are typically chemically modified to fit an application. However, siRNA chemical modification pattern has not been specifically optimized for extracellular vesicle-mediated delivery. Here we used cholesterol-conjugated, hydrophobically modified asymmetric siRNAs (hsiRNAs) to evaluate the effect of backbone, 5'-phosphate, and linker chemical modifications on productive hsiRNA loading onto extracellular vesicles. hsiRNAs with a combination of 5'-(E)-vinylphosphonate and alternating 2'-fluoro and 2'-O-methyl backbone modifications outperformed previously used partially modified siRNAs in extracellular vesicle-mediated Huntingtin silencing in neurons. Between two commercially available linkers (triethyl glycol [TEG] and 2-aminobutyl-1-3-propanediol [C7]) widely used to attach cholesterol to siRNAs, TEG is preferred compared to C7 for productive exosomal loading. Destabilization of the linker completely abolished silencing activity of loaded extracellular vesicles. The loading of cholesterol-conjugated siRNAs was saturated at approximately 3,000 siRNA copies per extracellular vesicle. Overloading impaired the silencing activity of extracellular vesicles. The data reported here provide an optimization scheme for the successful use of hydrophobic modification as a strategy for productive loading of RNA cargo onto extracellular vesicles.
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    Comparison of partially and fully chemically-modified siRNA in conjugate-mediated delivery in vivo

    Hassler, Matthew R.; Turanov, Anton A.; Alterman, Julia F.; Haraszti, Reka A.; Coles, Andrew H.; Osborn, Maire F.; Echeverria, Dimas; Nikan, Mehran; Salomon, William E.; Roux, Loic; et al. (Oxford University Press, 2018-02-08)
    Small interfering RNA (siRNA)-based drugs require chemical modifications or formulation to promote stability, minimize innate immunity, and enable delivery to target tissues. Partially modified siRNAs (up to 70% of the nucleotides) provide significant stabilization in vitro and are commercially available; thus are commonly used to evaluate efficacy of bio-conjugates for in vivo delivery. In contrast, most clinically-advanced non-formulated compounds, using conjugation as a delivery strategy, are fully chemically modified (100% of nucleotides). Here, we compare partially and fully chemically modified siRNAs in conjugate mediated delivery. We show that fully modified siRNAs are retained at 100x greater levels in various tissues, independently of the nature of the conjugate or siRNA sequence, and support productive mRNA silencing. Thus, fully chemically stabilized siRNAs may provide a better platform to identify novel moieties (peptides, aptamers, small molecules) for targeted RNAi delivery.
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    5-Vinylphosphonate improves tissue accumulation and efficacy of conjugated siRNAs in vivo

    Haraszti, Reka A.; Roux, Loic; Coles, Andrew H.; Turanov, Anton A.; Alterman, Julia F.; Echeverria, Dimas; Godinho, Bruno M. D. C.; Aronin, Neil; Khvorova, Anastasia (2017-07-27)
    5-Vinylphosphonate modification of siRNAs protects them from phosphatases, and improves silencing activity. Here, we show that 5-vinylphosphonate confers novel properties to siRNAs. Specifically, 5-vinylphosphonate (i) increases siRNA accumulation in tissues, (ii) extends duration of silencing in multiple organs and (iii) protects siRNAs from 5-to-3 exonucleases. Delivery of conjugated siRNAs requires extensive chemical modifications to achieve stability in vivo. Because chemically modified siRNAs are poor substrates for phosphorylation by kinases, and 5-phosphate is required for loading into RNA-induced silencing complex, the synthetic addition of a 5-phosphate on a fully modified siRNA guide strand is expected to be beneficial. Here, we show that synthetic phosphorylation of fully modified cholesterol-conjugated siRNAs increases their potency and efficacy in vitro, but when delivered systemically to mice, the 5-phosphate is removed within 2 hours. The 5-phosphate mimic 5-(E)-vinylphosphonate stabilizes the 5 end of the guide strand by protecting it from phosphatases and 5-to-3 exonucleases. The improved stability increases guide strand accumulation and retention in tissues, which significantly enhances the efficacy of cholesterol-conjugated siRNAs and the duration of silencing in vivo. Moreover, we show that 5-(E)-vinylphosphonate stabilizes 5 phosphate, thereby enabling systemic delivery to and silencing in kidney and heart.
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