The present invention relates to a low toxicity antisense nucleic acid medicine that can modulate expression of a target transcriptional product. More specifically, this invention relates to a low toxicity antisense nucleic acid medicine that can modulate expression of a target transcriptional product in the central nervous system and other sites of a subject.
In recent years, an oligonucleotide has been drawing attention in the ongoing development of pharmaceuticals called nucleic acid medicines, and in particular, development of a nucleic acid medicine utilizing the antisense method is actively pushed forward from the viewpoint of e.g., high selectivity to target genes. The antisense method includes a method of selectively modifying or inhibiting expression of a protein encoded by a target gene by introducing an oligonucleotide complementary to a partial sequence of mRNA (sense strand) of the target gene (e.g., antisense oligonucleotide, i.e., ASO) into a cell. Similarly, an antisense method also targets a miRNA and functions to modify the activity of such a miRNA.
As a nucleic acid utilizing the antisense method, the present inventors have developed a double-stranded nucleic acid complex (heteroduplex oligonucleotide, HDO) formed by annealing an antisense oligonucleotide and a complementary strand thereto (Patent Literature 1, Non Patent Literatures 1 and 2). The inventors have also developed a double-stranded antisense nucleic acid (Patent Literature 2) having an exon skipping effect, a short gapmer-antisense oligonucleotide, in which an additional nucleotide is added to the 5′ end, the 3′ end, or both the 5′ end and the 3′ end of a gapmer (antisense oligonucleotide) (Patent Literature 3), and a double-stranded agent (hetero-chimera-duplex oligonucleotide, HCDO) for delivering a therapeutic oligonucleotide (Patent Literature 4).
Nusinersen is an antisense nucleic acid medicine for intrathecal administration for the treatment of spinal muscular atrophy, which is approved in the United States in December 2016. Nusinersen is a chemically modified nucleic acid in which the 2′ position of the sugar moiety of a nucleic acid is replaced with 2′-O-(2-methoxyethyl) (2′-MOE). Spinal muscular atrophy is caused by an inactivating mutation in the SMN1 gene coding for a survival motor neuron (SMN) protein, while nusinersen modulates alternative splicing of the SMN2 gene to change it into the SMN1 gene, increases the amount of the survival motor neuron protein in the central nervous system, and thereby improves the symptoms of spinal muscular atrophy (Patent Literature 5). However, in some cases nusinersen causes side effects such as various neurotoxicities when administered intrathecally. It is expected that the development of chemically modified nucleic acid medicines for the treatment of neurological diseases by intrathecal administration as in the case of nusinersen will be the mainstream of future drug development. However, for this purpose, it is necessary to decrease possible side effects (toxicity) which may occur in administration into the central nervous system to improve the safety.
An object of the present invention is to provide a low toxicity antisense nucleic acid medicine that can modulate expression of a target transcriptional product in the central nervous system and other sites of a subject.
To achieve the above object, the present inventors have studied intensively and found that when an antisense oligonucleotide is administered as part of a nucleic acid complex having a double-stranded structure to a subject, an antisense effect can be obtained in the central nervous system and other sites with low toxicity and expression of a target transcriptional product can be modulated, and eventually completed the invention.
That is, the present invention encompasses the following.
[1] A low toxicity composition for administration to a central nervous system for modulating expression of a target transcriptional product in the central nervous system of a subject, comprising a nucleic acid complex formed by annealing together a first nucleic acid strand comprising an antisense oligonucleotide region with respect to the target transcriptional product, and a second nucleic acid strand comprising a complementary region that is complementary to at least part of the first nucleic acid strand.
[2] The composition according to [1], wherein the toxicity is neurotoxicity.
[3] The composition according to [2], wherein the neurotoxicity produces a symptom selected from death, breathing abnormality, cardiovascular abnormality, headache, nausea or vomiting, unresponsiveness or low responsiveness, impaired consciousness, mental disorder, personality change, hallucination, delusion, cognitive dysfunction, abnormal posture, involuntary movement, tremor, convulsion, hyperactivity, disturbance of motor function, paralysis, sensory abnormality, and autonomic nervous system dysfunction.
[4] The composition according to any one of [1] to [3], wherein the first nucleic acid strand is 9 to 50 base in length.
[5] The composition according to any one of [1] to [4], wherein said antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand is 7 to 20 base in length.
[6] The composition according to any one of [1] to [5], wherein the second nucleic acid strand is 9 to 50 base in length.
[7] The composition according to any one of [1] to [6], wherein said complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand is complementary to at least part of said antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand.
[8] The composition according to any one of [1] to [7], wherein the first nucleic acid strand is a nucleic acid strand comprising: (a) at least four contiguous DNA nucleotides or modified DNA nucleotides recognized by RNase H when hybridized to said transcriptional product, and further comprising: (b) a 5′ wing region comprising one or multiple modified nucleotides placed on the 5′ end side of said at least four contiguous DNA nucleotides or modified DNA nucleotides recognized by RNase H; and/or (c) a 3′ wing region comprising one or multiple modified nucleotides placed on the 3′ end side of said at least four contiguous DNA nucleotides or modified DNA nucleotides recognized by RNase H.
[9] The composition according to any one of [1] to [8], wherein the second nucleic acid strand is a nucleic acid strand comprising (a) at least four contiguous RNA nucleosides, and further comprising: (b) one or multiple modified nucleotides placed on the 5′ end side of said at least four contiguous RNA nucleosides, and/or (c) one or multiple modified nucleotides placed on the 3′ end side of said at least four contiguous RNA nucleosides.
[10] The composition according to any one of [7] to [9], wherein the second nucleic acid strand further comprises at least one overhanging region located on one or both of the 5′ end side and the 3′ end side of said complementary region.
[11] The composition according to [10], wherein the overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand is at least 5 base in length.
[12] The composition according to any one of [1] to [6], wherein the first nucleic acid strand further comprises a complementary RNA region, and said complementary RNA region has at least two contiguous RNA nucleotides that can be recognized by RNase H when the first nucleic acid strand is hybridized with the second nucleic acid strand, said complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand is a complementary DNA region, and said complementary DNA region can hybridize with the complementary RNA region in the first nucleic acid strand to promote the recognition of at least two contiguous RNA nucleotides in the first nucleic acid strand by RNase H, and further said antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand cannot hybridize with the second nucleic acid strand.
[13] The composition according to any one of [1] to [12] wherein the administration to the central nervous system is intrathecal administration or intraventricular administration.
[14] The composition according to any one of [1] to [13], wherein the expression modulation of the target transcriptional product is reduction of the amount of the target transcriptional product.
[15] The composition according to any one of [1] to [14] for treating a central nervous system disease.
[16] The composition according to any one of [1] to [15], wherein the antisense oligonucleotide region is a gapmer type antisense oligonucleotide region, or a mixmer type antisense oligonucleotide region.
[17] The composition according to any one of [1] to [16], wherein the antisense oligonucleotide region comprises an LNA nucleoside.
[18] Use of a nucleic acid strand comprising a complementary region that is complementary to at least part of an antisense oligonucleotide for reducing the toxicity of the antisense oligonucleotide.
[19] A method for administering a low toxicity antisense nucleic acid medicine to the central nervous system of a subject comprising a step of administering the composition according to any one of [1] to [17] to the central nervous system of a subject.
[20] The method according to [19], which is a method for treating a central nervous system disease of a subject.
[21] A method for producing a low toxicity antisense nucleic acid medicine comprising (i) a step of preparing a first nucleic acid strand comprising an antisense oligonucleotide region with respect to a target transcriptional product; (ii) a step of preparing a second nucleic acid strand comprising a complementary region that is complementary to at least part of the first nucleic acid strand; (iii) a step of forming a nucleic acid complex by annealing together the first nucleic acid strand and the second nucleic acid strand; and (iv) a step of preparing an antisense nucleic acid medicine containing the nucleic acid complex.
[22] A low toxicity composition for modulating expression of a target transcriptional product in a subject, comprising a nucleic acid complex formed by annealing together a first nucleic acid strand comprising an antisense oligonucleotide region with respect to the target transcriptional product, and a second nucleic acid strand comprising a complementary region that is complementary to at least part of the first nucleic acid strand.
[23] The composition according to [22], wherein the toxicity is neurotoxicity or nephrotoxicity.
[24] The composition according to [22] or [23] for intravenous administration or subcutaneous administration.
This description encompasses the disclosures of Japanese Patent Application No. 2018-051338, which is the basis for the priority of the present application.
The present invention provides a low toxicity antisense nucleic acid medicine that can modulate expression of a target transcriptional product in a subject.
The present invention is described in detail below.
The present invention uses a nucleic acid complex in which a first nucleic acid strand and a second nucleic acid strand comprising (or consisting of) a complementary region that is complementary to at least part of the first nucleic acid strand are annealed via hydrogen bonds of complementary base pairs. The nucleic acid complex has a double-stranded structure produced by the annealing of the first nucleic acid strand with the second nucleic acid strand. It is not necessary that all of the first nucleic acid strand and all of the second nucleic acid strand are annealed, rather part of the first nucleic acid strand and all of the second nucleic acid strand may be annealed, or all of the first nucleic acid strand and part of the second nucleic acid strand may be annealed. Alternatively, part of the first nucleic acid strand and part of the second nucleic acid strand may be annealed.
The first nucleic acid strand is a nucleotide strand comprising or consisting of an antisense oligonucleotide region with respect to a target transcriptional product. An “antisense oligonucleotide” or an “antisense nucleic acid” means a single-stranded oligonucleotide which comprises a base sequence that is capable of hybridizing (namely complementary) to at least part of a target transcriptional product (mainly a transcriptional product of a target gene), and is able to produce an antisense effect on a target transcriptional product. According to the present invention, the antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand can produce an antisense effect on a target transcriptional product.
An “antisense effect” means the modulation of expression of a target transcriptional product, which results from hybridization of the target transcriptional product (RNA-sense strand) with a strand (e.g., DNA strand) that is complementary to a partial sequence of a transcriptional product or the like, and designed to produce an antisense effect. The modulation of expression of a target transcriptional product includes inhibition or reduction of expression of a target gene, or the level (expression amount) of a target transcriptional product, or in a certain example inhibition of translation or inhibitory effect on nucleic acid-protein binding, for example splicing function modification effect, for example, exon skipping, or degradation of a transcriptional product (see
Although there is no particular restriction on the “target gene” whose expression is modulated (for example, suppressed, altered, or modified) by an antisense effect, examples thereof include a gene derived from an organism to which a nucleic acid complex of the invention is introduced, such as a gene whose expression increases in a variety of diseases. Further, a “transcriptional product of a target gene” is a mRNA transcribed from the genomic DNA encoding the target gene, and also includes a mRNA without a base modification, an unprocessed mRNA precursor, or the like. A “target transcriptional product” may include not only a mRNA, but also a non-coding RNA (ncRNA) such as a miRNA. Further, in general, a transcriptional product may be any RNA synthesized by a DNA-dependent RNA polymerase.
In an embodiment, a “target transcriptional product” may be, for example, β-secretase 1 (BACE1) mRNA, microtubule-associated protein tau (Tau) mRNA, metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 (MALAT1) non-coding RNA, or dystrophin mRNA. The base sequences of murine and human BACE1 mRNA are shown in SEQ ID NO: 1 and 2 respectively (the base sequence of mRNA is shown as the base sequence of DNA). In addition, the base sequences of murine and human Tau mRNA are shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 and 4 respectively (the base sequence of mRNA is shown as the base sequence of DNA). Further, the base sequences of murine and human MALAT1 non-coding RNA are shown in SEQ ID NO: 5 and 6, respectively (the base sequence of RNA is shown as the base sequence of DNA). The base sequences of genes and transcriptional products are available from public databases, such as the NCBI (U.S. National Center for Biotechnology Information) database.
The antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand comprises a base sequence that can hybridize to at least part of a target transcriptional product (for example, any target region). The target region may include a 3′ UTR, a 5′ UTR, an exon, an intron, a coding region, a translation initiation region, a translation termination region, or any other nucleic acid region. The target region of a target transcriptional product may comprise, for example, the base sequence of positions 1569 to 1581 of SEQ ID NO: 1 in the case of murine BACE1 mRNA, the base sequence of positions 3339 to 3354 of SEQ ID NO: 3 in the case of murine Tau mRNA, and the base sequence of positions 1316 to 1331 of SEQ ID NO: 5 in the case of murine MALAT1 non-coding RNA.
The term “nucleic acid” or “nucleic acid molecule” as used herein may refer to a monomer of a nucleotide or a nucleoside, or may mean an oligonucleotide consisting of a plurality of monomers. The term “nucleic acid strand” or “strand” is also used herein to refer to an oligonucleotide. A nucleic acid strand can be produced as a full-length strand, or a partial strand by a chemical synthesis method (for example, with an automated synthesis apparatus) or by an enzymatic process (for example, but not limited to, by a polymerase, ligase, or a restriction reaction).
The term “nucleobase” or “base” as used herein means a base component (heterocyclic moiety) constituting a nucleic acid, and primarily adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, and uracil are known.
The term “complementary” as used herein means a relationship in which nucleobases can form so-called Watson-Crick base pairs (natural type base pair), or non-Watson-Crick base pairs (Hoogsteen type base pairs, or the like) via hydrogen bonds. In the present invention, it is not necessarily required that the antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand is completely complementary to at least a part of a target transcriptional product (e.g., the transcriptional product of a target gene), but it is permitted that the base sequence has a complementarity of at least 70%, preferably at least 80%, and more preferably at least 90% (e.g., 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99% or more). An antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand can hybridize to a target transcriptional product, when the base sequences are complementary (typically, when a base sequence is complementary to at least part of the base sequence of the target transcriptional product). Similarly, it is not necessarily required that the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand is completely complementary to at least part of the first nucleic acid strand, but it is permitted that the base sequence has a complementarity of at least 70%, preferably at least 80%, and more preferably at least 90% (e.g., 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99% or more). When the base sequence of the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand is complementary to at least part of the first nucleic acid strand, the region can be annealed thereto. The complementarity of a base sequence can be determined using a BLAST program or the like. One skilled in the art can easily determine the conditions (temperature, salt concentration, etc.) under which the two strands can be annealed or hybridized to each other, taking into account the complementarity between the strands. Further, one skilled in the art can easily design an antisense nucleic acid that is complementary to the target transcriptional product based on, for example, information on the base sequence of a target gene.
Hybridization conditions may include a variety of stringent conditions, such as a low-stringent condition and a high-stringent condition. As for a low-stringent condition, a condition with a relatively low temperature, and a high salt concentration, for example, 30° C., 2×SSC, and 0.1% SDS, may be acceptable. As for a high-stringent condition, a condition with a relatively high temperature, and a low salt concentration, for example, 65° C., 0.1×SSC, and 0.1% SDS, may be acceptable. The stringency of hybridization can be adjusted by varying the conditions, such as temperature and salt concentration. In this regard, 1×SSC contains 150 mM of sodium chloride and 15 mM of sodium citrate.
The antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand may be usually, but not limited to, at least 7 base in length, at least 8 base in length, at least 9 base in length, at least 10 base in length, at least 11 base in length, at least 12 base in length, or at least 13 base in length. The antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand may be 35 base in length or less, 30 base in length or less, 25 base in length or less, 24 base in length or less, 23 base in length or less, 22 base in length or less, 21 base in length or less, 20 base in length or less, 19 base in length or less, 18 base in length or less, 17 base in length or less, or 16 base in length or less. The antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand may be, for example, from 7 to 35 base in length, from 7 to 30 base in length, from 7 to 25 base in length, from 7 to 20 base in length, from 8 to 20 base in length, from 9 to 20 base in length, from 10 to 20 base in length, from 11 to 18 base in length, or from 12 to 16 base in length.
Although there is no particular restriction, the first nucleic acid strand may be at least 7 base in length, at least 8 base in length, at least 9 base in length, at least 10 base in length, at least 11 base in length, at least 12 base in length, or at least 13 base in length. The first nucleic acid strand may be 50 base in length or less, 45 base in length or less, 40 base in length or less, 35 base in length or less, 30 base in length or less, 28 base in length or less, 26 base in length or less, 24 base in length or less, 22 base in length or less, 20 base in length or less, 18 base in length or less, or 16 base in length or less. The first nucleic acid strand may be, for example, from 9 to 50 base in length, from 10 to 40 base in length, from 11 to 35 base in length, or from 12 to 30 base in length.
The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be usually, but not limited to, at least 7 base in length, at least 8 base in length, at least 9 base in length, at least 10 base in length, at least 11 base in length, at least 12 base in length, or at least 13 base in length. The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be 35 base in length or less, 30 base in length or less, 25 base in length or less, 24 base in length or less, 23 base in length or less, 22 base in length or less, 21 base in length or less, 20 base in length or less, 19 base in length or less, 18 base in length or less, 17 base in length or less, or 16 base in length or less. The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be, for example, from 9 to 35 base in length, from 9 to 30 base in length, from 10 to 25 base in length, from 10 to 20 base in length, from 11 to 18 base in length, or from 12 to 16 base in length.
Although there is no particular restriction, the second nucleic acid strand may be at least 7 base in length, at least 8 base in length, at least 9 base in length, at least 10 base in length, at least 11 base in length, at least 12 base in length, or at least 13 base in length. The second nucleic acid strand may be 50 base in length or less, 45 base in length or less, 40 base in length or less, 35 base in length or less, 30 base in length or less, 28 base in length or less, 26 base in length or less, 24 base in length or less, 22 base in length or less, 20 base in length or less, 18 base in length or less, or 16 base in length or less. The second nucleic acid strand may be, for example, from 9 to 50 base in length, from 10 to 40 base in length, from 11 to 35 base in length, or from 12 to 30 base in length. The length is generally selected especially according to the balance between the strength of the antisense effect and the specificity of the nucleic acid strand with respect to the target among other factors, such as cost, and synthesis yield.
The second nucleic acid strand comprises or consists of a complementary region that is complementary to at least part of the first nucleic acid strand.
In an embodiment, the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand can be complementary to at least part of the antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand. The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be complementary to all of the antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand. The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be complementary additionally to a part of the first nucleic acid strand other than the antisense oligonucleotide region. An example of this embodiment is a heteroduplex oligonucleotide (HDO) disclosed in International Publication No. WO 2013/089283.
In an embodiment, the second nucleic acid strand consisting of a complementary region may have the same length as the first nucleic acid strand consisting of an antisense oligonucleotide region (
In a further embodiment, the second nucleic acid strand may comprise at least one overhanging region located on one or both of the 5′ end side and the 3′ end side of the complementary region. An example of this embodiment is described in PCT/JP2017/035553. An “overhanging region” means a region adjacent to the complementary region, where the 5′ end of the second nucleic acid strand extends beyond the 3′ end of the first nucleic acid strand, and/or the 3′ end of the second nucleic acid strand extends beyond the 5′ end of the first nucleic acid strand, when the first nucleic acid strand and the second nucleic acid strand anneal to form a double-stranded structure. In other words, it means nucleotide region(s) in the second nucleic acid strand, protruded from the double-stranded structure. The overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand may be located on the 5′ end side of the complementary region (
In an embodiment, the overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand does not comprise a base sequence that is complementary to the first nucleic acid strand. The overhanging region may comprise a base sequence having a complementarity of 50% or less, 40% or less, 30% or less, 25% or less, 20% or less, 15% or less, 10% or less, 5% or less, or 0% with the base sequence of the first nucleic acid strand.
In an embodiment, it is preferable that the overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand is substantially not able to hybridize to a transcriptional product in the cell, and does not affect gene expression. For example, it is preferable that the overhanging region does not include a therapeutic oligonucleotide, such as an antisense oligonucleotide, a microRNA inhibitor (antimiR), a splice-switching oligonucleotide, a single-stranded siRNA, a microRNA, and a pre-microRNA.
The base sequence of an overhanging region may comprise a base sequence having an identity of at least 70%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 93%, at least 95%, at least 98%, or 100% with a base sequence shown in any one of SEQ ID NOs: 7 to 11, or a base sequence in which at least some of the T's of the base sequence are replaced with U. The overhanging region may comprise a natural nucleotide and/or a non-natural nucleotide including the above base sequence.
The overhanging region in a nucleic acid complex of the present invention is preferably a single-stranded region.
The overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand may be at least 5 base in length, at least 6 base in length, at least 7 base in length, at least 8 base in length, at least 9 base in length, at least 10 base in length, at least 11 base in length, at least 12 base in length, or at least 13 base in length, but not limited thereto. The overhanging region is 30 base in length or less, 29 base in length or less, 28 base in length or less, 27 base in length or less, 26 base in length or less, 25 base in length or less, 24 base in length or less, 23 base in length or less, 22 base in length or less, 21 base in length or less, 20 base in length or less, 19 base in length or less, 18 base in length or less, 17 base in length or less, 16 base in length or less, 15 base in length, or 14 base in length or less. The overhanging region may be, for example, from 5 to 20 base in length, from 6 to 18 base in length, from 7 to 17 base in length, from 8 to 12 base in length, or from 9 to 15 base in length. In a case where an overhanging region exists on each of the 5′ end side and the 3′ end side of the complementary region, the lengths of the respective overhanging regions may be the same or different.
In general, a “nucleoside” is a combination of a base and a sugar. The nucleobase (also known as a base) moiety of a nucleoside is usually a heterocyclic base moiety. A “nucleotide” further comprises a phosphate group covalently bonded to the sugar moiety of the nucleoside. In a nucleoside comprising a pentofuranosyl sugar, a phosphate group is linkable to the 2′, 3′, or 5′ hydroxyl portion of the sugar. An oligonucleotide is formed by contiguous nucleosides linked by a covalent bond, forming a linear polymer oligonucleotide. Inside the oligonucleotide structure, it is conceived that a phosphate group generally forms an internucleoside bond in the oligonucleotide.
A nucleic acid strand can comprise a natural nucleotide and/or a non-natural nucleotide. A “natural nucleotide” comprises deoxyribonucleotide found in DNA and ribonucleotide found in RNA. The “deoxyribonucleotide” and “ribonucleotide” may be also occasionally referred to as “DNA nucleotide” and “RNA nucleotide”, respectively.
Similarly, a “natural nucleoside” comprises deoxyribonucleoside found in DNA and ribonucleoside found in RNA. The “deoxyribonucleoside” and “ribonucleoside” may be also occasionally referred to as “DNA nucleoside” and “RNA nucleoside,” respectively.
A “non-natural nucleotide” refers to any nucleotide other than natural nucleotide and comprises a modified nucleotide or a nucleotide mimic. Similarly, a “non-natural nucleoside” refers to any nucleoside other than natural nucleoside, and comprises a modified nucleoside, or a nucleoside mimic. A “modified nucleotide” means a nucleotide having one or more of a modified sugar moiety, a modified internucleoside bond, and a modified nucleobase. A “modified nucleoside” means a nucleoside having a modified sugar moiety and/or a modified nucleobase. A nucleic acid strand comprising a non-natural oligonucleotide is in many cases more preferable than a natural type, because of such desirable characteristics as enhanced cellular uptake, enhanced affinity for a nucleic acid target, increased stability in the presence of a nuclease, or increased inhibitory activity.
The term “modified internucleoside bond” refers to an internucleoside bond having a substitution or any change from a naturally occurring internucleoside bond (i.e., phosphodiester bond). The modified internucleoside bond comprises an internucleoside bond comprising a phosphorus atom, and an internucleoside bond without a phosphorus atom. Examples of a typical phosphorus-containing internucleoside bond include, but not limited to, a phosphodiester bond, a phosphorothioate bond, a phosphorodithioate bond, a phosphotriester bond, a methylphosphonate bond, a methylthiophosphonate bond, a boranophosphate bond, and a phosphoramidate bond. A phosphorothioate bond refers to an internucleoside bond in which a non-bridging oxygen atom of a phosphodiester bond is substituted with a sulfur atom. A method for preparing a phosphorus-containing bond or a phosphorus-free bond is well known. A modified internucleoside bond should preferably be a bond whose nuclease resistance is higher than a naturally occurring internucleoside bond.
A “modified nucleobase” or a “modified base” means any nucleobase other than adenine, cytosine, guanine, thymine, or uracil. An “unmodified nucleobase” or an “unmodified base” (natural nucleobase) means adenine (A) and guanine (G), which are purine bases, as well as thymine (T), cytosine (C), and uracil (U), which are pyrimidine bases. Examples of a modified nucleobase include, but not limited to, 5-methylcytosine, 5-fluorocytosine, 5-bromocytosine, 5-iodocytosine, N4-methylcytosine, N6-methyladenine, 8-bromoadenine, N2-methylguanine, and 8-bromoguanine. A modified nucleobase is preferably 5-methylcytosine.
The term “modified sugar” refers to a sugar having a substitution and/or any change from a natural sugar moiety (i.e., a sugar moiety found in DNA(2′-H) or RNA(2′-OH)). A nucleic acid strand may, in some cases, comprise one or more modified nucleoside including a modified sugar. Such a sugar-modified nucleoside can impart beneficial biological properties, such as an enhanced nuclease stability, an increased binding affinity, or the like to a nucleic acid strand. In a certain embodiment, a nucleoside comprises a chemically modified ribofuranose ring moiety. Examples of a chemically modified ribofuranose ring include, but not limited to, addition of a substituent (including 5′ or 2′ substituent), formation of a bicyclic nucleic acid (bridged nucleic acid, BNA) by forming a bridge between non-geminal ring atoms, and substitution of a ribosyl ring oxygen atom with S, N(R), or C(R1)(R2) (wherein R, R1 and R2 independently represent H, a C1 to C12 alkyl, or a protective group), and a combination thereof.
Examples of a nucleoside having a modified sugar moiety include, but not limited to, a nucleoside having a substituent, such as 5′-vinyl, 5′-methyl(R or S), 4′-S, 2′-F (2′-fluoro group), 2′-OCH3 (2′-OMe group, or 2′-O-methyl group), and 2′-O(CH2)2OCH3. A substituent at the 2′ position may be selected from allyl, amino, azide, thio, —O-allyl, —O—(C1-C10 alkyl), —OCF3, —O(CH2)2SCH3, —O(CH2)2—O—N(Rm)(Rn), and —O—CH2—C(═O)—N(Rm)(Rn), wherein each Rm and Rn is independently H or a substituted or unsubstituted C1-C10 alkyl. A “2′-modified sugar” means a furanosyl sugar modified at the 2′ position.
The term “bicyclic nucleoside” refers to a modified nucleoside comprising a bicyclic sugar moiety. A nucleic acid comprising a bicyclic sugar moiety is generally referred to as bridged nucleic acid (BNA). A nucleoside comprising a bicyclic sugar moiety is sometimes referred to as “bridged nucleoside”.
A bicyclic sugar may be a sugar in which the carbon atom at the 2′ position and the carbon atom at the 4′ position are bridged via two or more atoms. Examples of a bicyclic sugar are publicly known to those skilled in the art. A subgroup of nucleic acid (BNA) comprising a bicyclic sugar may be described as having a carbon atom at the 2′ position and a carbon atom at the 4′ position bridged by 4′-(CH2)p—O-2′, 4′-(CH2)p—CH2-2′, 4′-(CH2)p—S-2′, 4′-(CH2)p—OCO-2′, or 4′-(CH2)n—N(R3)—O—(CH2)m-2′ [in the formula, p, m, and n respectively represent an integer of 1 to 4, an integer of 0 to 2, and an integer of 1 to 3; and R3 represents a hydrogen atom, an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, a cycloalkyl group, an aryl group, an aralkyl group, an acyl group, a sulfonyl group, or a unit substituent (such as a fluorescently or chemiluminescently labeled molecule, a functional group having nucleic acid cleavage activity, and intracellular or intranuclear localization signal peptide)]. Further, regarding the BNA according to a specific embodiment, in an OR2 substituent on the carbon atom at the 3′ position and an OR′ substituent on the carbon atom at the 5′ position, R1 and R2 are typically a hydrogen atom, but they may be the same as or different from each other, and further, a protecting group for a hydroxyl group for nucleic acid synthesis, an alkyl group, an alkenyl group, a cycloalkyl, an aryl group, an aralkyl group, an acyl group, a sulfonyl group, a silyl group, a phosphate group, a phosphate group protected by a protecting group for nucleic acid synthesis, or —P(R4)R5 [where R4 and R5 may be the same as or different from each other, and respectively are a hydroxyl group, a hydroxyl group protected by a protecting group for nucleic acid synthesis, a mercapto group, a mercapto group protected by a protecting group for nucleic acid synthesis, an amino group, an alkoxy group having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, an alkylthio group having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, a cyanoalkoxy group having 1 to 6 carbon atoms, or an amino group substituted with an alkyl group having 1 to 5 carbon atoms]. Non-limiting examples of such BNA include methyleneoxy (4′-CH2—O-2′) BNA (LNA (Locked Nucleic Acid®, also known as 2′,4′-BNA), e.g., α-L-methyleneoxy (4′-CH2—O-2′) BNA, or β-D-methyleneoxy (4′-CH2—O-2′) BNA, ethyleneoxy (4′-(CH2)2—O-2′) BNA (also known as ENA), β-D-thio (4′-CH2—S-2′) BNA, aminooxy (4′-CH2—O—N(R3)-2′) BNA, oxyamino (4′-CH2—N(R3)—O-2′) BNA (also known as 2′,4′-BNANC), 2′,4′-BNAcoc, 3′-amino-2′,4′-BNA, 5′-methyl BNA, (4′-CH(CH3)—O-2′) BNA (also known as cEt BNA), (4′-CH(CH2OCH3)—O-2′)BNA (also known as cMOE BNA), amide BNA (4′-C(O)—N(R)-2′) BNA (R═H, Me) (also known as AmNA), 2′-O,4′-C-spirocyclopropylene bridged nucleic acid (also known as scpBNA), and other BNAs known to those skilled in the art.
A bicyclic nucleoside having a methyleneoxy (4′-CH2—O-2′) bridge is sometimes referred to as LNA nucleoside.
The method for preparing a modified sugar is well known to those skilled in the art. In a nucleotide having a modified sugar moiety, the nucleobase moiety (natural one, modified one, or a combination thereof) may be maintained for hybridization with an appropriate nucleic acid target.
The “nucleoside mimic” comprises a structure used for substituting a sugar, or a sugar and a base, and, not mandatorily, a bond at one or more positions of an oligomeric compound. The term “oligomeric compound” means a polymer of linked monomeric subunits capable of hybridizing to at least one region of a nucleic acid molecule. Example of a nucleoside mimic include morpholino, cyclohexenyl, cyclohexyl, tetrahydropyranyl, bicyclic or tricyclic sugar mimic, for example, a nucleoside mimic having a non-furanose sugar unit. The “nucleotide mimic” includes a structure used for substituting a nucleoside and a bond at one or more positions of an oligomeric compound. Examples of a nucleotide mimic include a peptide nucleic acid, and a morpholino nucleic acid (a morpholino linked with —N(H)—C(═O)—O— or other non-phosphodiester bonds). A peptide nucleic acid (PNA) is a nucleotide mimic having a main chain in which N-(2-aminoethyl)glycine is linked by an amide bond in place of a sugar. An example of the structure of a morpholino nucleic acid is shown in
In general, modifications can be performed such that nucleotides in the same strand can independently undergo different modifications. In addition, to confer resistance to enzymatic cleavage, the same nucleotide may have a modified internucleoside bond (e.g., phosphorothioate bond), and also have a modified sugar (e.g., 2′-O-methyl modified sugar, or bicyclic sugar). Further, the same nucleotide can have a modified nucleobase (e.g., 5-methylcytosine), and also have a modified sugar (e.g., 2′-O-methyl modified sugar, or bicyclic sugar).
The number, type, and position of a non-natural nucleotide in a nucleic acid strand can influence the antisense effect or the like provided by a nucleic acid complex. Selection of a modification may vary depending on the sequence of a target gene or the like, but one skilled in the art can determine a suitable embodiment by referring to the description of a literature related to the antisense method (for example, WO 2007/143315, WO 2008/043753, and WO 2008/049085). Furthermore, when the antisense effect of the nucleic acid complex after the modification is measured, if the measurement value thus obtained is not significantly lower than the measurement value of the nucleic acid complex before the modification (for example, in a case where the measurement value obtained after the modification are 70% or more, 80% or more, or 90% or more with respect to the measurement value of the nucleic acid complex before the modification), a relevant modification may be evaluated.
The measurement of an antisense effect may be performed, for example, by administering a test nucleic acid compound to a subject (e.g., mouse), and measuring the expression amount of a target gene whose expression is modulated by the antisense effect provided by the test nucleic acid compound, or the level (amount) of the target transcriptional product (for example, the amount of mRNA, or the amount of RNA such as microRNA, the amount of cDNA, or the amount of protein), for example, several days to several months after the administration (for example, after 2 to 7 days or 1 month)
For example, in a case where the expression amount of a target gene, or the level of a target transcriptional product measured is reduced by at least 10%, at least 20%, at least 25%, at least 30%, or at least 40% compared to the negative control (e.g., vehicle administration), it is demonstrated that the test nucleic acid compound can produce an antisense effect (reduction of target transcriptional product amount).
The internucleoside bond in the first nucleic acid strand may be a naturally occurring internucleoside bond and/or a modified internucleoside bond.
At least one, at least two, or at least three internucleoside bonds from the 5′ end of the first nucleic acid strand may be modified internucleoside bonds. At least one, at least two, or at least three internucleoside bonds from the 3′ end of the first nucleic acid strand may be modified internucleoside bonds. For example, two internucleoside bonds from the end of a nucleic acid strand refers to an internucleoside bond closest to the end of the nucleic acid strand, and an internucleoside bond positioned next thereto and located in the direction opposite to the end of the nucleic acid strand. A modified internucleoside bond(s) at the terminal region of a nucleic acid strand is preferred because they can reduce or inhibit undesired degradation of the nucleic acid strand.
The modified internucleoside bond(s) may be at least 70%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 93%, at least 95%, at least 98%, or 100% of the internucleoside bonds of the antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand. The modified internucleoside bond may be a phosphorothioate bond.
The nucleoside in the first nucleic acid strand may be a natural nucleoside (comprising deoxyribonucleoside, ribonucleoside, or both) and/or a non-natural nucleoside.
The antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand may be an antisense oligonucleotide region of a gapmer type (a gapmer type antisense oligonucleotide region). A “gapmer type” refers to a nucleoside constitution consisting of a central region (DNA gap region) including at least four contiguous deoxyribonucleosides, and regions (5′ wing region, and 3′ wing region) which comprise non-natural nucleosides and are located on the 5′ end side and the 3′ end side of the central region. The gapmer in which a non-natural nucleoside is constituted with a bridged nucleoside is specifically referred to as “BNA/DNA gapmer”. The length of the DNA gap region may be 4 to 20 base in length, 5 base in length, 6 to 16 base in length, 7 to 14 base in length, or 8 to 12 base in length. The lengths of the 5′ wing region and the 3′ wing region may independently be usually 1 to 10 base in length, 1 to 7 base in length, 2 to 5 base in length, or 2 to 3 base in length. The 5′ wing region and the 3′ wing region are required to comprise at least one non-natural nucleoside, and may further comprise a natural nucleoside. A gapmer type antisense oligonucleotide region may have a BNA/DNA gapmer type nucleoside constitution comprising a 5′ wing region comprising two or three bridged nucleosides, a 3′ wing region comprising two or three bridged nucleosides, and a DNA gap region therebetween. The bridged nucleoside may comprise a modified nucleobase (e.g., 5-methylcytosine). The gapmer may be a “LNA/DNA gapmer” in which the bridged nucleoside is constituted by LNA nucleoside.
The antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand may be an antisense oligonucleotide region of a mixmer type (a mixmer type antisense oligonucleotide region). A “mixmer” means herein a nucleic acid strand which comprises alternate natural nucleosides and non-natural nucleosides having periodic or random segment lengths, and does not comprise four or more contiguous deoxyribonucleosides or ribonucleosides. Among mixmers, a mixmer in which the non-natural nucleoside is a bridged nucleoside, and the natural nucleoside is a deoxyribonucleoside, is specifically called “BNA/DNA mixmer”. A mixmer is not limited to comprise only two kinds of nucleosides. A mixmer may comprise any number of kinds of nucleosides, irrespective of a natural or modified nucleoside, or a nucleoside mimic. For example, it may comprise one or two contiguous deoxyribonucleosides separated by a bridged nucleoside (e.g., LNA nucleoside). A bridged nucleoside may further comprise a modified nucleobase (e.g., 5-methylcytosine).
The first nucleic acid strand may comprise entirely or partly a nucleoside mimic or a nucleotide mimic. A nucleotide mimic may be a peptide nucleic acid and/or a morpholino nucleic acid. The first nucleic acid strand may comprise at least one modified nucleoside. The modified nucleoside may comprise a 2′-modified sugar. The 2′-modified sugar may be a sugar comprising a 2′-O-methyl group.
An internucleoside bond in the second nucleic acid strand may be a naturally occurring internucleoside bond and/or a modified internucleoside bond.
All of the internucleoside bonds in the second nucleic acid strand may be modified internucleoside bonds. Alternatively, all of the internucleoside bonds in the second nucleic acid strand may be natural internucleoside bonds.
At least one, at least two, or at least three internucleoside bonds from the 5′ end of the second nucleic acid strand may be modified internucleoside bonds. At least one, at least two, or at least three internucleoside bonds from the 3′ end of the second nucleic acid strand may be modified internucleoside bonds.
In an embodiment where the second nucleic acid strand comprises an overhanging region, at least one, at least two, or at least three internucleoside bonds from the free end of the overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand may be modified internucleoside bonds. The “free end of the overhanging region” refers to herein the end of the overhanging region that is not bound to the complementary region. For example, in an embodiment where the overhanging region is located on the 5′ end side of the complementary region as shown in
Modified internucleoside bonds may be at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 95% (e.g., at least 96%, at least 97%, at least 98%, or at least 99%), or preferably 100% of the internucleoside bonds in the overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand. An internucleoside bond in the overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand means a bond between the nucleosides constituting the overhanging region, while an internucleoside bond between the overhanging region and the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand is not included. For example, when an overhanging region consists of 10 nucleosides, then the number of internucleoside bonds in the region is 9. However, the internucleoside bond between the overhanging region and the complementary region may be a modified internucleoside bond, or a natural internucleoside bond. The modified internucleoside bond may be a phosphorothioate bond.
In an embodiment where the second nucleic acid strand comprises an overhanging region, at least one, at least two, or at least three internucleoside bonds from the free end of the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be modified internucleoside bonds. The “free end of the complementary region” refers to the end on the side not bound to the overhanging region in the complementary region. For example, in an embodiment where the overhanging region is located on the 5′ end side of the complementary region as shown in
In a preferred embodiment, all the internucleoside bonds in the overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand are modified internucleoside bonds, and at least two internucleoside bonds from the free end of the complementary region are modified internucleoside bonds.
Nucleosides in the second nucleic acid strand may be natural nucleosides (comprising deoxyribonucleoside, ribonucleoside, or both) and/or non-natural nucleosides.
The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may comprise natural nucleosides (including deoxyribonucleoside, ribonucleoside, or both) and/or non-natural nucleosides.
In an embodiment, the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may comprise at least two, at least three, at least four, or at least five contiguous ribonucleosides. Such contiguous ribonucleosides can form a double strand with a DNA gap region of a gapmer type oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand. The double strand can be recognized by RNase H and facilitate cleavage of the second nucleic acid strand by RNase H. The contiguous ribonucleosides may be linked by a phosphodiester bond. The nucleosides in the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may consist of ribonucleosides.
In another embodiment, the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be without at least two contiguous ribonucleosides. The nucleosides in the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may consist of ribonucleosides.
The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may comprise at least one, at least two, or at least three modified nucleosides from the 5′ end. The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may comprise at least one, at least two, or at least three modified nucleosides from the 3′ end. The complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may comprise at least one, at least two, or at least three modified nucleosides from the 5′ end, and comprise at least one, at least two, or at least three modified nucleosides from the 3′ end. The modified nucleosides may comprise a modified sugar and/or a modified nucleobase. The modified sugar may be a bicyclic sugar, or a 2′-modified sugar (e.g., a sugar containing a 2′-O-methyl group). The modified nucleobase may be 5-methylcytosine.
In an embodiment where the second nucleic acid strand comprises an overhanging region, at least one, at least two, or at least three nucleosides from the free end of the complementary region may be modified nucleosides. Specifically, one to three nucleosides from the free end of the complementary region may be modified nucleosides (e.g., nucleoside containing 2′-modified sugar, such as sugar that contains a 2′-O-methyl group), and other nucleosides in the complementary region may be a natural nucleoside (containing deoxyribonucleoside, ribonucleoside, or both).
In an embodiment, one to three nucleosides from the free end of the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be modified nucleosides (e.g., a nucleoside comprising 2′-modified sugar, such as sugar comprising a 2′-O-methyl group), and other nucleosides in the complementary region may be deoxyribonucleosides. In another embodiment, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 80%, at least 90%, or at least 95% of the nucleosides of the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand may be natural nucleosides.
In an embodiment in which the second nucleic acid strand comprises an overhanging region, the overhanging region in the second nucleic acid strand may comprise a natural nucleoside (comprising deoxyribonucleoside, ribonucleoside, or both) and/or a non-natural nucleoside.
In an embodiment, nucleosides of an overhanging region may comprise a deoxyribonucleoside, or consist of deoxyribonucleosides. In another embodiment, at least one, at least two, or at least three, more specifically one to three nucleosides from the free end of an overhanging region may be modified nucleosides. Further, at least one, at least two, or at least three, more specifically one to three nucleosides from the bound end of the overhanging region may be modified nucleosides. The “bound end of the overhanging region” herein refers to the end of the overhanging region, which is bound to the complementary region. A modified nucleoside may comprise a modified sugar and/or a modified nucleobase. The modified sugar may be a bicyclic sugar (e.g., a sugar comprising a 4′-CH2—O-2′ group). The modified nucleobase may be 5-methylcytosine.
In an embodiment, at least two nucleosides from the free end of an overhanging region may be modified nucleosides (e.g., a nucleoside containing a bicyclic sugar such as a sugar containing a 4′-CH2—O-2′ group). When a bicyclic sugar is comprised in an overhanging region, the strand length of the overhanging region may be, for example, from 9 to 12 bases.
In an embodiment, the nucleosides of an overhanging region may be free of a bicyclic sugar.
Furthermore, in another embodiment, the nucleosides in an overhanging region may be free of a modified nucleoside, and consist of natural deoxyribonucleosides and/or ribonucleosides. It can be advantageous in terms of synthesis cost to use natural deoxyribonucleosides and/or ribonucleosides. It can be also advantageous in terms of avoiding hybridization with an undesirable transcriptional product to use natural deoxyribonucleosides and/or ribonucleosides. When a bicyclic sugar is not comprised in the overhanging region, the strand length of the overhanging region can be, for example, from 9 to 17 bases.
The first nucleic acid strand and the second nucleic acid strand may comprise any combination of the modified internucleoside bonds and modified nucleosides described above.
In another specific embodiment, the first nucleic acid strand further comprises a complementary RNA region, and the complementary RNA region has at least two contiguous RNA nucleotides that can be recognized by RNase H when the first nucleic acid strand is hybridized to the second nucleic acid strand; the complementary region in the second nucleic acid strand is a complementary DNA region, and the complementary DNA region can hybridize to the complementary RNA region of the first nucleic acid strand to facilitate the recognition of at least two contiguous RNA nucleotides in the first nucleic acid strand by RNase H, and further the antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand cannot hybridize with the second nucleic acid strand. As an example of this embodiment, there is a hetero-chimera-duplex oligonucleotide (HCDO) disclosed in International Publication No. WO 2014/192310. The antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand may be located on the 5′ end side of the complementary RNA region (
The complementary DNA region is complementary to part or all of the complementary RNA region, and in some cases it may be complementary to part of the antisense oligonucleotide region. However, it is not required that the complementary RNA region is completely complementary to the complementary DNA region, or it has the same number of bases as the complementary DNA region.
The complementary RNA region may comprise 2, 3, 4, or 5, or even more, for example 5 to 20, 5 to 16, or 5 to 12 contiguous RNA nucleotides (natural RNA), which optionally may be flanked on one or both sides by modified RNA nucleotides.
The complementary DNA region may have a nucleoside constitution of gapmer type as described herein elsewhere.
Although there is no particular restriction on the length of the complementary RNA region or the complementary DNA region, it is usually at least 8 bases, at least 10 bases, at least 12 bases, or at least 13 bases. The length of the complementary RNA region or the complementary DNA region may be 20 bases or less, 25 bases or less, or 35 bases or less.
In an embodiment, the second nucleic acid strand may comprise at least one functional moiety bound to a polynucleotide. The functional moiety as indicated by “X” in
The bond between the second nucleic acid strand and the functional moiety may be a direct bond or an indirect bond mediated by another substance. However, in a specific embodiment, it is preferable that the functional moiety is directly bound to the second nucleic acid strand via a covalent bond, an ionic bond, a hydrogen bond, or the like, and a covalent bond is more preferable considering that a more stable bond can be obtained. The functional moiety may also be linked to the second nucleic acid strand via a cleavable linking group. For example, the functional moiety may be linked via a disulfide bond.
There is no particular restriction on the structure of a “functional moiety” in a specific embodiment insofar as the functional moiety confers a desired function to a nucleic acid complex and/or the strand to which the functional moiety is bound. Examples of the desired function include a labeling function, a purifying function, and a delivering function. Examples of a moiety that provides a labeling function include compounds such as a fluorescent protein, and luciferase. Examples of a moiety that provides a purifying function include compounds such as biotin, avidin, His-tag peptide, GST-tag peptide, and FLAG-tag peptide.
In some embodiments, a functional moiety serves to enhance transport to a cell or a cell nucleus. For example, it has been demonstrated that a certain peptide tag, when it is conjugated with an oligonucleotide, enhances cellular uptake of an oligonucleotide. Examples thereof include the arginine-rich peptide P007 and B-peptide disclosed in HaiFang Yin, et al., Human Molecular Genetics, Vol. 17(24), 3909-3918 (2008), and the references therein. Intranuclear transport can be enhanced by conjugating a moiety such as m3G-CAP (see Pedro M. D. Moreno, et al., Nucleic Acids Res., Vol. 37, 1925-1935 (2009)) with an oligonucleotide.
It is preferable that a molecule having an activity of delivering a nucleic acid complex of some embodiments of the present invention to a “target site” in the body is bound to the second nucleic acid strand as a functional moiety, from the viewpoint of delivering a nucleic acid complex to a target site or a target region in the body with high specificity and high efficiency, so as to suppress quite efficiently expression of a target transcriptional product by a relevant nucleic acid (e.g., target gene).
The moiety having a “target delivering function” may be, for example, a lipid. Examples of such a lipid include a lipid such as cholesterol and a fatty acid (e.g., vitamin E (tocopherol, tocotrienol), vitamin A, and vitamin D); a liposoluble vitamin, such as vitamin K (e.g., acylcarnitine); an intermediate metabolite such as acyl-CoA; a glycolipid, a glyceride, and a derivative or an analog thereof. Among these, cholesterol and vitamin E (tocopherol and tocotrienol) are used in certain embodiments, considering that they have higher safety. However, a nucleic acid complex of a certain embodiment of the present invention may be not be bound to a lipid.
Also, from the viewpoint that a nucleic acid complex can be delivered to various organs with high specificity and high efficiency by binding to various proteins present on the cell surface of various organs, examples of a “functional moiety” of a certain embodiment include a peptide or a protein (e.g., a receptor ligand, and an antibody, and/or fragments thereof).
One skilled in the art can produce the first nucleic acid strand and the second nucleic acid strand constituting a nucleic acid complex by appropriately selecting known methods. For example, a nucleic acid can be produced by designing the base sequence of each nucleic acid based on the information about the base sequence of a target transcriptional product (or, in some examples, the base sequence of a target gene), synthesizing the nucleic acid using a commercial automatic nucleic acid synthesizer (such as product of Applied Biosystems, Inc., or product of Beckman Coulter, Inc.), and then purifying the thus obtained oligonucleotides using a reversed phase column or the like. The nucleic acid produced by this method is mixed in an appropriate buffer solution and denatured at about 90° C. to 98° C. for several min (e.g., 5 min), and then the nucleic acid is annealed at about 30° C. to 70° C. for about 1 to 8 hours, so that a nucleic acid complex can be produced in this manner. Production of an annealed nucleic acid complex is not limited to such time and temperature protocols. Conditions suitable for promoting annealing of strands are well known in the art. A nucleic acid complex to which a functional moiety is bound can be produced by using a nucleic acid species to which a functional moiety has been bound in advance, and performing the synthesis, purification, and annealing as described above. A large number of methods for linking a functional moiety to a nucleic acid are well known in the art. Alternatively, a nucleic acid strand is available on demand from a manufacturer (e.g., GeneDesign Inc.) by specifying a base sequence and a modification site or type.
A composition for administration to a central nervous system for modulating expression of a target transcriptional product in the central nervous system of a subject, comprising the above-described nucleic acid complex is provided. This composition is characterized in that the toxicity (side effect) associated with administration of a nucleic acid to the central nervous system of a subject is reduced (or non-toxic).
“Toxicity” means an effect of causing an objective or subjective symptom or functional abnormality undesirable to a subject, such as death, pain, tremor, convulsion, motor impairment, cognitive dysfunction, impaired consciousness, general malaise, fatigue, nausea or vomiting, dizziness, numbness, and wobbling. Toxicity may be toxicity to any organ. The toxicity may be neurotoxicity. The “neurotoxicity” means an effect that causes damage to a nervous tissue, including a central nervous tissue (including neurons) and a peripheral nervous tissue, and interferes with the normal activity of the nervous system. The neurotoxicity may cause any symptom selected from death, breathing abnormality, cardiovascular abnormality, headache, nausea or vomiting, unresponsiveness or low responsiveness, impaired consciousness, mental disorder, personality change, hallucination, delusion, cognitive dysfunction, abnormal posture, involuntary movement, tremor, convulsion, hyperactivity, disturbance of motor function, paralysis, sensory abnormality, or autonomic nervous system dysfunction. The neurotoxicity may be acute neurotoxicity. Acute neurotoxicity can be neurotoxicity that occurs within 1, 3, 6, 9, 12, 24, or 48 hours from the administration. The toxicity can be evaluated for example by an acute phase tolerability score, a side-effect event rate, or the mortality, as described in Examples below.
The present composition can exhibit reduced toxicity compared to administration of a single-stranded antisense oligonucleotide to the central nervous system of a subject. Here, the “single-stranded antisense oligonucleotide” means a nucleotide strand consisting solely of an antisense oligonucleotide region in the first nucleic acid strand constituting a nucleic acid complex of the present invention.
The present composition is for administration to the central nervous system of a subject. The administration to the central nervous system may be an administration via any administration route capable of administering the present composition to any tissue or body fluid of the central nervous system. For example, it may be intrathecal (or intraspinal) administration, or intraventricular administration.
A subject may be any animal, including human. However, there is no specific limitation on animal other than human. It may be any vertebrate such as mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and agnathonae, or invertebrate such as arthropods, molluscs, and echinoderms. For example, various livestock, poultry, pets, and laboratory animals can be a subject. The subject may be a subject in need of modulation of expression of a target transcriptional product in the central nervous system. The subject may also be a subject in need of a treatment of a central nervous system disease.
The present composition may be formulated by a known formulation method. For example, the composition can be made into an injectable agent, a peroral agent, or a topical preparation.
The present composition may appropriately incorporate a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, specifically a surfactant, a pH regulator, a stabilizer, an excipient, a vehicle, a preservative, a diluent, an isotonizing agent, a sedative, a buffer, and other additives, as well as a pharmaceutically acceptable solvent, specifically sterile water, a physiological saline solution, a buffer solution (including phosphate buffer), and other solvents.
The dose of the present composition may be selected appropriately according to the age, body weight, symptoms, and health status of a subject, the dosage form, etc. The dose of the present composition may be, for example, in terms of nucleic acid complex, from 0.0000001 mg/kg/day to 1,000,000 mg/kg/day, from 0.00001 mg/kg/day to 10,000 mg/kg/day, or from 0.001 mg/kg/day to 100 mg/kg/day.
The present composition may be a pharmaceutical composition. The present composition may be for treating a central nervous system disease.
The present composition may be also a pharmaceutical composition for treating or preventing, for example, diseases (degenerative disease, vascular disorder, immune disease, endocrine and metabolic disease, tumor, or infectious disease) related to genetic abnormalities (e.g., gene mutation, gene deletion, gene insertion, gene conversion, or abnormality in the number of repetitive sequences), or, for example, abnormality in expression of a target gene (increase, decrease, or abnormality in gene variant).
In an embodiment, a pharmaceutical composition may be for treating or preventing a central nervous system disease, or a disease in which the nerve root or the dorsal root ganglion in the medullary cavity is impaired.
In an embodiment, a nucleic acid complex comprised in a composition for administration to the central nervous system may be free of a lipid such as vitamin E (tocopherol, tocotrienol), or cholesterol.
A disease to be treated with the present composition can be a disease of the nervous system related to genetic abnormality. The nervous system can be divided into the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system, but a disease to be treated with the present composition may be primarily a central nervous system disease. The central nervous system consists of the brain and the spinal cord. The brain includes the cerebrum (cerebral cortex, cerebral white matter, and basal ganglion), the diencephalon (thalamus, subthalamic nucleus), the cerebellum (cerebellar cortex, cerebellar nucleus), and the brainstem (midbrain, substantia nigra, bridge, medulla oblongata). The spinal cord includes the cervical spinal cord, the thoracic spinal cord, the lumbar spinal cord, the sacral spinal cord, and the coccygeal spinal cord. Although the central nervous system herein may be any of these regions, it may be particularly the cerebral cortex (frontal lobe, temporal lobe, parietal lobe, or occipital lobe), the cerebellum, striatum, globus pallidus, claustrum, hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, brainstem, cervical spinal cord, thoracic spinal cord, or lumbar spinal cord. The peripheral nerve consists of the cranial nerve, and the spinal nerve. Thus, the target disease to be treated can be a disease in which the nerve root or the cauda equina in the medullary cavity, or the dorsal root ganglion is affected (e.g., carcinomatous meningitis).
Examples of a central nervous system disease include, but not limited to, brain tumor, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, and Huntington's disease. For example, in a treatment of Alzheimer's disease, drug delivery to the hippocampus and/or the parietal lobe may be effective. In a treatment of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) (frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), semantic dementia (SD), or progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA)), and Pick disease, drug delivery to at least one of the frontal lobe, the temporal lobe, and the substantia nigra may be effective. In a treatment of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), or Parkinson's disease dementia, drug delivery to at least one of the occipital lobe, the substantia nigra, and the striatum may be effective. In a treatment of Parkinson's disease, drug delivery to the substantia nigra and/or the striatum may be effective. In a treatment of cortical basal ganglia degeneration (CBD), drug delivery to at least one of the frontal lobe, the parietal lobe, the basal ganglion, and the substantia nigra may be effective. In a treatment of progressive supranuclear paralysis (PSP), drug delivery to at least one of the frontal lobe, the basal ganglion, and the substantia nigra may be effective. In a treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or spinal muscular atrophy, drug delivery to at least one of the frontal lobe, the parietal lobe, the substantia nigra, the basal ganglion, and the spinal cord may be effective. In a treatment of spinocerebellar degeneration (SCD) SCA1 type through SCA34 type, drug delivery to the brainstem and/or the cerebellum may be effective. In a treatment of dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA), drug delivery to at least one of the brainstem, the basal ganglion, and the cerebellum may be effective. In a treatment of spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), drug delivery to at least one of the skeletal muscle, the brainstem, and the spinal cord may be effective. In a treatment of Friedreich's ataxia (FA), drug delivery to the brainstem and/or the cerebellum may be effective. In a treatment of Huntington's disease, drug delivery to at least one of the striatum, the frontal lobe, the parietal lobe, and the basal ganglion may be effective. In a treatment of a prion disease (mad cow disease, GSS), drug delivery to at least one of the cerebral cortex, the cerebral white matter, the basal ganglion, and the substantia nigra may be effective. In a treatment of cerebral white matter encephalopathy, drug delivery to the cerebral white matter may be effective. In particular it may be effective in a treatment of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. In a treatment of encephalitis (viral, bacterial, fungal, or tuberculous), or meningitis (viral, bacterial, fungal, or tuberculous), drug delivery to the whole brain may be effective. In a treatment of metabolic encephalopathy, toxic encephalopathy, or trophopathic encephalopathy, drug delivery to the whole brain may be effective. In a treatment of cerebral infarction, cerebral hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage, moyamoya disease, anoxic encephalopathy, drug delivery to the whole brain may be effective. In a treatment of diffuse axonal injury, drug delivery to the cerebral white matter may be effective. In a treatment of head trauma, drug delivery to the whole brain may be effective. In a treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) or neuromyelitis optica (NMO), drug delivery to at least one of the cerebral white matter, the cerebral cortex, the optic nerve, and the spinal cord may be effective. In a treatment of myotonic dystrophy (DM1, DM2), drug delivery to at least one of the skeletal muscle, the cardiac muscle, the cerebral cortex, and the cerebral white matter may be effective. In a treatment of hereditary spastic paraparesis (HSP), drug delivery to the parietal lobe and/or the spinal cord may be effective. In a treatment of Fukuyama muscular dystrophy, drug delivery to at least one of the skeletal muscles, the cerebral cortex, and the cerebral white matter may be effective. In a treatment of DLB, drug delivery to the frontal lobe and/or the parietal lobe may be effective. In a treatment of multiple system atrophy (MSA), drug delivery to at least one of the striatum, the basal ganglion, the cerebellum, the substantia nigra, the frontal lobe, and the temporal lobe may be effective. In a treatment of Alexander's disease, drug delivery to the cerebral white matter may be effective. In a treatment of CADASIL and CARASIL, drug delivery to the cerebral white matter may be effective.
Examples of a disease that targets the nerve root and the cauda equina include, but not limited to, Guillain-Barre syndrome, Fisher syndrome, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, and cervical spondylotic radiculopathy. Further, peripheral neurogenic pain disease, Sjogren's syndrome, and paraneoplastic syndrome may be included.
Thus, a composition for treating each of the above diseases, or a method of treatment that includes administration of the composition is provided. Also a composition for modulating expression of a target transcriptional product (for example, for reducing the expression amount of a transcriptional product) at each of the above sites is provided.
Also a method of administering a low toxicity antisense nucleic acid medicine to the central nervous system of a subject, including a step of administering the above composition to the central nervous system of a subject is provided. This method may be a method of treating a central nervous system disease in a subject.
Also, a use of a nucleic acid strand including a complementary region that is complementary to at least part of an antisense oligonucleotide (such as a gapmer type or a mixmer type) for reducing the toxicity of the antisense oligonucleotide (such as a gapmer type or a mixmer type) is provided.
Further provided is a method for producing a low toxicity antisense nucleic acid medicine comprising:
(i) a step of preparing a first nucleic acid strand comprising an antisense oligonucleotide (such as a gapmer type or a mixmer type) region with respect to a target transcriptional product;
(ii) a step of preparing a second nucleic acid strand comprising a complementary region that is complementary to at least part of the first nucleic acid strand;
(iii) a step of forming a nucleic acid complex by annealing together the first nucleic acid strand and the second nucleic acid strand; and
(iv) a step of preparing an antisense nucleic acid medicine comprising the nucleic acid complex.
A low toxicity composition, comprising the above-described nucleic acid complex, for modulating expression of a target transcriptional product in a subject is provided. This composition can exhibit a reduced toxicity compared to a case where a single-stranded antisense oligonucleotide is administered to a subject.
Such administration of the composition can be performed, for example, by either of a parenteral route, or a peroral route. Specific examples of parenteral administration include intravenous administration, intraarterial administration, intraperitoneal administration, subcutaneous administration, intradermal administration, tracheal/bronchial administration, rectal administration, and intramuscular administration, as well as administration by blood transfusion. Administration may be performed by, but not limited to, intravenous administration or subcutaneous administration. Administration by intramuscular injection, intravenous infusion, or implanted continuous subcutaneous administration is also possible. Since self-injection by a patient is possible in the case of subcutaneous administration, it is suitable. In the case of intravenous administration, the amount of a nucleic acid complex contained in a single dose of the composition, namely the single dose of a nucleic acid complex may be, for example, 0.001 mg/kg or more, 0.005 mg/kg or more, 0.01 mg/kg or more, 0.25 mg/kg or more, 0.5 mg/kg or more, 1 mg/kg or more, 2.5 mg/kg or more, 5 mg/kg or more, 10 mg/kg or more, 20 mg/kg or more, 30 mg/kg or more, 40 mg/kg or more, 50 mg/kg or more, 75 mg/kg or more, 100 mg/kg or more, 150 mg/kg or more, 200 mg/kg or more, 300 mg/kg or more, 400 mg/kg or more, or 500 mg/kg or more. For example, any amount within the range of 0.001 to 500 mg/kg (e.g., 0.001 mg/kg, 0.01 mg/kg, 0.1 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg, 5 mg/kg, 10 mg/kg, 50 mg/kg, 100 mg/kg, or 200 mg/kg) can be selected as appropriate. The toxicity that can be mitigated by such a low toxicity composition may be, for example, neurotoxicity or nephrotoxicity. Nephrotoxicity refers to a property that causes functional abnormality and/or functional reduction in the kidney. Evaluation of the renal function can be conducted by any technique known to those skill in the art, such as a serological and biochemical test.
The present invention will be described in more detail below by way of Examples. However, the technical scope of the present invention is not limited to these Examples.
Experiments in vivo were conducted for examining side effects in the central nervous system due to the intraventricular administration of a double-stranded nucleic acid agent of an embodiment.
In this Example, side effects in the central nervous system were evaluated using four kinds of double-stranded agents shown in
The single-stranded ASO used as a control was a 13mer LNA/DNA gapmer (ASO (BACE1) 13mer in Table 1,
Double-stranded agent (HDO cRNA all PO,
Double-stranded agent (HDO cRNA all PS,
Double-stranded agent (HDO cDNA all PO,
Double-stranded agent (HDO cDNA all PS,
The sequences, chemical modifications and structures of the oligonucleotides used in Example 1 are shown in Table 1 and
Synthesis of all the oligonucleotides was entrusted to GeneDesign Inc. (Osaka, Japan). To prepare the above-described double-stranded agent, the first strand and the second strand were mixed in an equimolar amount, and the solution was heated at 95° C. for 5 min, then cooled down to 37° C., and held for 1 hour, thereby annealing the nucleic acid strands. The annealed nucleic acids were stored at 4° C., or on ice.
Under 2.5 to 4% isoflurane anesthesia, 7-week-old female ICR mice were fixed with a brain stereotaxic apparatus. Subsequently, a 2 to 3 cm anteroposterior skin incision was made between the ears, and drilling was performed with a 1 mm-diameter drill at 1 mm leftward and 0.2 mm backward from the bregma. A Hamilton syringe was filled with a nucleic acid agent. The needle was inserted by about 3 mm into the perforation, the nucleic acid agent was administered into the left lateral ventricle at a rate of 2 to 3 μL/min to the dosage of 12 μmol per mouse (n=4 to 7), and the skin was sutured with a nylon thread. PBS (negative control) was administered to mice in the cerebral ventricle in the same manner.
At 1, 3, and 6 hours after administration, side effects (tolerability) in the central nervous system were assessed by the following 11 behavioral assessment items.
(1) Alert, bright and responsive.
(2) Standing or hunching without stimuli.
(3) Shows movements without stimuli.
(4) Shows forward movement after being lifted up.
(5) Shows any movements after being lifted up.
(6) Responds to tail pinch.
(7) Regular breathing.
(8) No hyperactivity.
(9) No motor dysfunction and ataxia.
(10) Normal posture.
(11) No tremors/convulsions.
Scoring was performed for each item with “abnormal” (1 point) or “normal” (0 point) for a mouse, and a score of each mouse was calculated as the total points (0 to 11 points) to obtain the acute tolerability score. Further, the percentage of mice in which any one of the 11 items above was found abnormal was calculated as the side-effect event rate (%). In addition, the number of mice that died within one day after the administration was recorded. The results of the respective groups were compared, and significant differences were further assessed by a Bonferroni test.
The results of Example 1 are shown in Tables 2 to 4.
With respect to the acute tolerability scores shown in Table 2, a higher numerical value indicates a drug with lower tolerability. In the ASO administration group, rise of the acute tolerability score at 1 hour after the administration was observed, which thereafter decreased gradually, however the rise remained up to 6 hours. On the other hand, in the group of PBS administration (negative control) and the groups of administration of the four kinds of double-stranded agent HDO, the acute tolerability scores did not rise.
With respect to the side-effect event rates shown in Table 3, the side-effect event rate of the group of ASO administration was 100%, namely a side-effect was observed in all the mice, whereas the side-effect event rates in the group of PBS administration (negative control) and the groups of administration of the four kinds of double-stranded agent HDO were 0%, and no side effects were observed in these groups.
Two of the six mice in the ASO administration group died, whereas none of the mice in the PBS group (negative control) and the groups of administration of the four kinds of double-stranded agent HDO died (Table 4).
These results indicate that HDO which is a double-stranded agent can avoid a side effect (toxicity) in the central nervous system seen in the case of a single-stranded agent. The avoidance effect was found regardless of the nucleic acid species (RNA or DNA) or the type of the internucleoside bond comprised in the complementary strand (second strand) in HDO.
An experiment in vivo for examining a side effect in the central nervous system due to the intraventricular administration of a double-stranded agent of an embodiment having a complementary strand (second strand) of various lengths was conducted.
The target was the same BACE1 mRNA as in Example 1. The control (ASO) was also the same single-stranded LNA/DNA gapmer as in Example 1 (ASO (BACE1) 13mer in Table 5,
Double-stranded agent (HDO 13mer,
Double-stranded agent (HDO 12mer,
Double-stranded agent (HDO 11 mer,
Double-stranded agent (HDO 10 mer,
The sequences, chemical modifications and structures of the oligonucleotides used in Example 2 are shown in Table 5 and
A nucleic acid agent was administered to mice at a dose of 12 μmol/mouse (n=4 to 5) into the left lateral ventricle. The mice used, the method of administration, and the analysis method of side effects were as described in Example 1.
The results in Example 2 are shown in Tables 6 to 8.
With respect to the acute tolerability scores shown in Table 6, a rise was observed at 1 hour after the administration in the ASO administration group, which thereafter decreased gradually, however the rise remained up to 6 hours. On the other hand, in the groups of administration of four kinds of double-stranded agent HDO, the acute tolerability scores rose, but were lower than the ASO administration group.
The side-effect event rates shown in Table 7 also tended to be lower in the double-stranded agent HDO administration groups than in the ASO administration group.
As for the relationship between the number of administrations and number of deaths shown in Table 8, one out of five mice in the ASO administration group died, while none of the mice in the PBS administration group (negative control) and the four double-stranded agent HDO administration groups died.
These results indicate that the reduction of side effects in the double-stranded agent HDO is observed even when the complementary strand (second strand) is shorter than the antisense oligonucleotide (first strand).
Experiments were conducted to confirm that the double-stranded agent HDO used in Examples 1 and 2 actually formed a double strand.
The single-stranded ASO and the double-stranded agents HDO used in Examples 1 and 2 were electrophoresed (100 V, 60 min) in a Tris-borate-EDTA buffer using a 15% acrylamide native gel. The gel was stained with GelRed (Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Ltd.), and detection was performed under UV light using a ChemiDoc Touch imaging system (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc.).
The results of Example 3 are shown in
Experiments in vivo were conducted for examining a side effect in the central nervous system due to the intraventricular administration of a double-stranded agent of an embodiment having an overhanging region.
The target was the same BACE1 mRNA as in Example 1. The control (ASO) was also the same single-stranded LNA/DNA gapmer as in Example 1 (ASO (BACE1) 13mer in Table 9,
Double-stranded agent (OH 26mer,
Double-stranded agent (OH 26mer PS-4,
Double-stranded agent (OH 26mer PS-8,
Double-stranded agent (OH 30mer,
Double-stranded agent (OH 22mer,
Double-stranded agent (OH 18mer,
The sequences, chemical modifications and structures of the oligonucleotides used in Example 4 are shown in Table 9 and
A nucleic acid agent was administered to mice at a dose of 12 μmol/mouse (n=4 to 5) into the left lateral ventricle. The mice used, the method of administration, and the analysis method of side effects were as described in Example 1.
Seven days after the injection, the mice were perfused with PBS, and then the mouse was dissected and the left hippocampus was isolated. RNA was extracted using the Isogen I kit (GeneDesign Inc.) according to the protocol. The cDNA was synthesized using the Transcriptor Universal cDNA Master, DNase (Roche Diagnostics) according to the protocol. A quantitative RT-PCR was performed with TaqMan (Roche Applied Science). The primers used in the quantitative RT-PCR were the products designed and produced by Thermo Fisher Scientific (formerly Life Technologies Corp.) according to various gene numbers. The amplification conditions (temperature and time) were as follows: 95° C. for 15 sec, 60° C. for 30 sec, and 72° C. for 1 sec (1 cycle), which was repeated for 40 cycles. Based on the results of the quantitative RT-PCR thus obtained, the expression amount of BACE1/the expression amount of ACTB (internal standard gene) was calculated respectively.
The results in Example 4 are shown in Tables 10 to 12 and
With respect to the acute tolerability scores shown in Table 10, rise at 1 hour after the administration was observed in the ASO administration group, which was thereafter reduced gradually, however the rise remained up to 6 hours. Meanwhile, in any of the PBS administration group (negative control) and the groups of administration of six kinds of double-stranded agent, the acute tolerability scores did not increase.
With respect to the side-effect event rates shown in Table 11, in many mice in the ASO administration group side effects were observed, however in any of the mice in the PBS administration group (negative control), and the groups of administration of six kinds of double-stranded agent, side-effect was not observed.
As for the relationship between the number of administrations and the number of deaths shown in Table 12 shows that two out of six mice in the ASO administration group died, while none of the mice in the PBS administration group (negative control) and the groups of administration of six kinds of double-stranded agent died.
Further, all the double-stranded agents having an overhanging region tended to exhibit a higher target gene (BACE1) inhibitory effect than ASO (
These results demonstrate that a double-stranded agent having an overhanging region improves side effects in the central nervous system, and enhances a gene inhibitory effect compared to a single-stranded agent ASO.
Experiments in vivo were conducted for examining side effects in the central nervous system due to intraventricular administration of a double-stranded agent of an embodiment targeting a gene different from that in Example 1.
The single-stranded ASO to be used as a control was a 16mer LNA/DNA gapmer comprising three LNA nucleosides from the 5′ end, and three LNA nucleosides from the 3′ end and ten DNA nucleosides between them (ASO (Tau) 16mer in Table 13,
Double stranded agent HDO (
Double stranded agent OH (
The sequences, chemical modifications and structures of the oligonucleotides used in Example 5 are shown in Table 13 and
A nucleic acid agent was administered to mice at a dose of 6 μmol/mouse (n=4) into the left lateral ventricle. The mice used, the method of administration, and the analysis method of side effects were as described in Example 1.
The results of Example 5 are shown in Tables 14 to 16.
With respect to the acute tolerability scores shown in Table 14, rise at 1 hour after the administration was observed in the ASO administration group, which was thereafter decreased gradually, and improved after 6 hours. Meanwhile, in any of the PBS-administered group (negative control) and the groups of administration of two kinds of double-stranded agent (HDO and OH), the acute tolerability scores did not rise.
With respect to the side-effect event rates shown in Table 15, side effects were observed in many mice in the ASO administration group, however side-effects were not observed in any mice of the PBS administration group (negative control) and the groups of administration of two kinds of double-stranded agent.
As for the relationship between the number of administrations and the number of deaths shown in Table 16, one out of four mice in the ASO administration group died, while none of the mice in the PBS administration group (negative control) and the groups of administration of two kinds of double-stranded agent died.
These results indicate that the side effect improving effect in the central nervous system by a double-stranded agent is not dependent on a target gene, and is applicable to a variety of target genes.
Experiments in vivo were conducted for examining side effects in the central nervous system due to intraventricular administration of a double-stranded agent of an embodiment different from those in Examples 1 to 5.
The target was the same BACE1 mRNA as in Example 1. The control (ASO) was also the same single-stranded LNA/DNA gapmer as in Example 1 (ASO (BACE1) 13mer in Table 17,
Double stranded agent OH (
Double stranded agent HCDO (
The sequences, chemical modifications and structures of the oligonucleotides used in Example 6 are shown in Table 17 and
A nucleic acid agent was administered to mice at a dose of 12 μmol/mouse (n=4 to 11) into the left lateral ventricle. As a side effect, the number of mice that died within one day after the administration was recorded. The mice used, the method of administration, and the analysis method of side effects were as described in Example 1.
The results of Example 6 are shown in Table 18.
Six out of the 11 mice in the ASO administration group died, however none of the mice in the PBS administration group (negative control) and the groups of administration of two kinds of double-stranded agent (OH and HCDO) died (Table 18). These results indicated that a double-stranded agent having an overhanging region, and a double-stranded agent having a double-stranded nucleic acid structure bound to the 3′ end side of the antisense oligo region were able to improve the side effects compared to a single-stranded agent ASO.
Experiments in vivo were conducted for examining side effects in the central nervous system due to intrathecal administration of a double-stranded nucleic acid agent of an embodiment.
The single-stranded ASO to be used as a control was a 16mer LNA/DNA gapmer comprising three LNA nucleosides from the 5′ end, and three LNA nucleosides from the 3′ end, and 10 DNA nucleosides between them (ASO (MALAT) 16mer in Table 19,
The sequences, chemical modifications and structures of the oligonucleotides used in Example 7 are shown in Table 19 and
A nucleic acid agent was administered to mice intrathecally in the lumbar region at a dose of 4 mg/kg (n=4 to 9). As a side effect, the number of mice that died within one day after the administration was recorded. The mice used, and the analysis method of side effects were as described in Example 1.
The results of Example 7 are shown in Table 20.
Four out of nine mice in the ASO administration group died, however none of the mice in the PBS administration group (negative control) and the group of administration of tocopherol-bound double-stranded agent HDO died (Table 20). These results indicated that a tocopherol-bound double-stranded agent HDO administered intrathecally was able to improve the side effects compared to a single-stranded agent ASO.
Experiments in vivo were conducted for examining side effects of intravenous administration of the double-stranded nucleic acid agent of an embodiment in a primate.
The single-stranded ASO to be used as a control was a 16mer LNA/DNA gapmer comprising three LNA nucleosides from the 5′ end, and three LNA nucleosides from the 3′ end and ten DNA nucleosides between them (ASO (mfMALAT1) in Table 21,
The sequences, chemical modifications, and structures of the oligonucleotides used in Example 8 are shown in Table 21 and
The cynomolgus monkey was a male with a weight of 1.8 kg. All experiments were conducted with n=1. Each nucleic acid agent was injected intravenously into the cynomolgus monkey at a dose of 50 mg/kg through the saphenous vein. In addition, a cynomolgus monkey injected solely with PBS or the first strand (ASO) was produced as a negative control group.
On day 3 after the intravenous administration, BUN (blood urea nitrogen), and a creatinine level (Cre) were measured by a serologic biochemical test. When these values are higher, the renal function is indicated to be lowered.
After intravenous administration, frequent vomiting was seen in an ASO administered individual, while vomiting was not seen in an HDO administered individual.
The results of the evaluation of renal function by a serologic biochemical test on day 3 after the intravenous administration are shown in Table 22.
As shown in Table 22 in an ASO-administered individual, the blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and the creatinine level (Cre) were increased after the administration compared to those before the administration. On the other hand, in an HDO-administered individual, neither blood urea nitrogen (BUN) nor creatinine (Cre) showed clear increase after the administration.
These results indicated that a double-stranded HDO was able to avoid vomiting and decrease in the renal function which were seen with a single-stranded ASO.
Experiments in vivo were conducted for examining side effects of intravenous administration or subcutaneous administration of a double-stranded nucleic acid agent of an embodiment.
The single-stranded ASO to be used as a control was a 13mer LNA/DNA mixmer in which one DNA nucleoside and one LNA nucleoside are repeated alternately (ASO (dystrophin) 13mer in Table 23,
The sequences, chemical modifications, and structures of the oligonucleotides used in Example 9 are shown in Table 23 and
ASO was administered to mice intravenously at a dose of 100 mg/kg, or administered subcutaneously at a dose of 25, 50, or 100 mg/kg. Further, HDO was administered to mice intravenously, or subcutaneously at a dose of 100 mg/kg. They were observed for any change of conditions during 2 weeks after the administration.
The results in Example 9 are shown in Table 24.
As shown in Table 24, in an individual who received ASO intravenously (iv) at a dose of 100 mg/kg, or an individual who received it subcutaneously (sc) at a dose of 50 or 100 mg/kg, hyporesponsiveness and convulsion occurred in 10 min or less, and these individuals died after about 30 min. On the other hand, in the individual who received HDO intravenously (iv) at a dose of 100 mg/kg, and the individual who received it subcutaneously (sc) at a dose of 100 mg/kg, neither hyporesponsiveness nor death was observed for 2 weeks after the administration.
These results indicated that a double-stranded HDO avoided acute toxicity at the time of systemic administration (such as intravenous administration, or subcutaneous administration) which is seen with a single-stranded ASO.
All publications, patents, and patent applications cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference directly herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2018-051338 | Mar 2018 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2019/011464 | 3/19/2019 | WO | 00 |