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What Can RNA-Based Therapy Do for Monogenic Diseases?

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics15010260

Keywords

personalized medicine; monogenic disorders; premature termination codon mutations; splicing mutations; mRNA; antisense oligonucleotides

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RNA-based approaches for treating monogenic diseases include the use of small antisense oligonucleotides and mRNA administration. However, further optimization is needed for these methods.
The use of RNA-based approaches to treat monogenic diseases (i.e., hereditary disorders caused by mutations in single genes) has been developed on different fronts. One approach uses small antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) to modulate RNA processing at various stages; namely, to enhance correct splicing, to stimulate exon skipping (to exclude premature termination codon variants), to avoid undesired messenger RNA (mRNA) transcript degradation via the nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) pathway, or to induce mRNA degradation where they encode toxic proteins (e.g., in dominant diseases). Another approach consists in administering mRNA, which, like gene therapy, is a mutation-agnostic approach with potential application to any recessive monogenic disease. This is simpler than gene therapy because instead of requiring targeting of the nucleus, the mRNA only needs to be delivered to the cytoplasm. Although very promising (as demonstrated by COVID-19 vaccines), these approaches still have potential for optimisation, namely regarding delivery efficiency, adverse drug reactions and toxicity.

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