4.4 Review

Opportunities and challenges for antisense oligonucleotide therapies

Journal

JOURNAL OF INHERITED METABOLIC DISEASE
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 72-87

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jimd.12251

Keywords

antisense oligonucleotides; personalized medicine; RNA therapeutics; splicing modulation; targeted gene knockdown; therapies

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AON therapies involve modified nucleotide short strands targeting RNA for specific protein knockdown or restoration, with 10 therapies approved in the US and Europe. Chemical modifications, delivery vehicles, and conjugates improvements allow for lower doses and reduced side effects.
Antisense oligonucleotide (AON) therapies involve short strands of modified nucleotides that target RNA in a sequence-specific manner, inducing targeted protein knockdown or restoration. Currently, 10 AON therapies have been approved in the United States and Europe. Nucleotides are chemically modified to protect AONs from degradation, enhance bioavailability and increase RNA affinity. Whereas single stranded AONs can efficiently be delivered systemically, delivery of double stranded AONs requires capsulation in lipid nanoparticles or binding to a conjugate as the uptake enhancing backbone is hidden in this conformation. With improved chemistry, delivery vehicles and conjugates, doses can be lowered, thereby reducing the risk and occurrence of side effects. AONs can be used to knockdown or restore levels of protein. Knockdown can be achieved by single stranded or double stranded AONs binding the RNA transcript and activating RNaseH-mediated and RISC-mediated degradation respectively. Transcript binding by AONs can also prevent translation, hence reducing protein levels. For protein restoration, single stranded AONs are used to modulate pre-mRNA splicing and either include or skip an exon to restore protein production. Intervening at a genetic level, AONs provide therapeutic options for inherited metabolic diseases as well. This review provides an overview of the different AON approaches, with a focus on AONs developed for inborn errors of metabolism.

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