NUCLEIC ACIDS FOR INHIBITING EXPRESSION OF COMPLEMENT FACTOR B (CFB) IN A CELL

Abstract
The invention relates to nucleic acid products that interfere with complement factor B (CFB) gene expression or inhibit its expression. The nucleic acids are preferably for use in the prophylaxis or treatment of complement associated diseases, disorders or syndromes, particularly C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), lupus nephritis, IgA nephropathy (IgA N), myasthenia gravis (MG), and primary membranous nephropathy.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to nucleic acid products that interfere with or inhibit complement factor B (CFB) gene expression. It further relates to therapeutic uses of such inhibition such as for the treatment of diseases and disorders associated with complement pathway deregulation, (particularly of the alternative pathway), and/or with over-activation or with ectopic expression or localisation or accumulation, of CFB in the body.


BACKGROUND

Double-stranded RNAs (dsRNA) able to bind through complementary base pairing to expressed mRNAs have been shown to block gene expression (Fire et al., 1998, Nature. 1998 Feb. 19; 391(6669):806-11 and Elbashir et al., 2001, Nature. 2001 May 24; 411(6836):494-8) by a mechanism that has been termed “RNA interference (RNAi)”. Short dsRNAs direct gene specific, post transcriptional silencing in many organisms, including vertebrates, and have become a useful tool for studying gene function. RNAi is mediated by the RNA induced silencing complex (RISC), a sequence specific, multi component nuclease that degrades messenger RNAs having sufficient complementary or homology to the silencing trigger loaded into the RISC complex. Interfering RNAs such as siRNAs, antisense RNAs, and micro RNAs, are oligonucleotides that prevent the formation of proteins by gene silencing, i.e., inhibiting gene translation of the protein through degradation of mRNA molecules. Gene silencing agents are becoming increasingly important for therapeutic applications in medicine.


According to Watts and Corey in the Journal of Pathology (2012; Vol 226, p 365-379), there are algorithms that can be used to design nucleic acid silencing triggers, but all of these have severe limitations. It may take various experimental methods to identify potent siRNAs, as algorithms do not take into account factors such as tertiary structure of the target mRNA or the involvement of RNA binding proteins. Therefore, the discovery of a potent nucleic acid silencing trigger with minimal off-target effects is a complex process. For the pharmaceutical development of these highly charged molecules, it is necessary that they can be synthesised economically, distributed to target tissues, enter cells and function within acceptable limits of toxicity.


The complement system or pathway is part of the innate immune system of host defence against invading pathogens. It mainly consists of a number of proteins that circulate in the bloodstream in the form of precursors. Most of the proteins that form the complement system, including the complement component protein C3 (also referred to herein simply as C3), are largely synthesised and secreted into the bloodstream by hepatocytes in the liver. Activation of the system leads to inflammatory responses resulting in phagocyte attraction and opsonization and consequently clearance of pathogens, immune complexes and cellular debris (Janeway's Immunobiology 9th Edition). The complement system consists of 3 pathways (Classical, Leptin and Alternative pathways), which all converge at the formation of so-called complement component 3 convertase enzyme complexes. These enzyme complexes cleave the complement component C3 protein into C3a and C3b. Once cleaved, C3b forms part of a complex that in turn cleaves C5 into C5a and C5b. After cleavage, C5b is one of the key components of the main complement pathway effectors, the membrane attack complex. C3 is therefore a key component of the complement system activation pathway.


Complement Factor B (CFB or “factor B”) is involved in activation of the alternative pathway.


Binding of CFB to C3b (e.g., on a cell surface) renders CFB susceptible to cleavage by Factor D, forming the serine protease C3Bb, which is itself a C3 convertase, leading to an amplification loop for C3 activation. CFB is primarily synthesised in the liver, as well as in low levels at several extrahepatic sites.


Several diseases are associated with aberrant acquired or genetic activation of the complement pathway as well as with aberrant or over-expression of C3. Among others, these are C3 glomerulopathy (CFBG), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis (IC-mediated GN), post-infectious glomerulonephritis (PIGN), systemic lupus erythematosus, lupus nephritis (LN; a renal complication of SLE), ischemia/reperfusion injury and IgA nephropathy (IgA N; reviewed in Ricklin et al., Nephrology, 2016 and others). Most of these diseases are associated with the kidney, as this organ is uniquely sensitive to complement-induced damage. However, diseases of other organs are also known to be related to complement dysfunction, such as, e.g., age-related macular degeneration (AMD), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), dysbiotic periodontal disease, malarial anaemia, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) and sepsis.


There are currently only few treatments for complement system mediated diseases, disorders and syndromes. The monoclonal humanized antibody Eculizumab is one of them. It is known to bind complement protein C5, thereby blocking the membrane attack complex at the end of the complement cascade (Hillmen et al., 2006 NEJM). However, only a subset of patients suffering from the above listed diseases respond to Eculizumab therapy. There is thus a high unmet need for medical treatments of complement mediated or associated diseases. C3 is a pivotal factor in the complement pathway activation. Inhibiting expression of factors such as CFB which are involved in C3 activation therefore presents a promising therapeutic strategy for many complement-mediated diseases. Targeting of CFB expression or activity, e.g., via antisense oligonucleotides or small molecule inhibitors, has been proposed as a potential therapeutic strategy for various complement-mediated conditions including AMD (Grossman et al., Molecular Vision 2017; 23:561-571) and lupus nephritis (Grossman et al., Immunobiology 2016; 221:701-708).


WO200404554, WO2007089375, WO2015089368, WO2019027015, WO2019089922 and WO2021222549 describe double-stranded siRNAs, WO2015038939, WO2015168635 describe single stranded antisense oligonucleotides (=ASO) targeted to CFB.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

One aspect of the invention is a double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of component factor B (CFB), wherein the nucleic acid comprises a first strand and a second strand, wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 5a.


The unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence may, for example, comprise a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences listed in Table 1.


The nucleic acids described herein are thus double-stranded nucleic acids capable of inhibiting expression of CFB, preferably in a cell, and may find use as a therapeutic agent or diagnostic agent, e.g., in associated diagnostic or therapeutic methods. The nucleic acid comprises or consists of a first strand and a second strand, and the first strand typically comprises sequences sufficiently complementary to CFB mRNA so as to mediate RNA interference.


One aspect relates to a composition comprising a nucleic acid as disclosed herein and a solvent (preferably water) and/or a delivery vehicle and/or a physiologically acceptable excipient and/or a carrier and/or a salt and/or a diluent and/or a buffer and/or a preservative.


One aspect relates to a composition comprising a nucleic acid as disclosed herein and a further therapeutic agent selected from e.g., an oligonucleotide, a small molecule, a monoclonal antibody, a polyclonal antibody and a peptide.


One aspect relates to a nucleic acid or a composition comprising it as disclosed herein for use as a therapeutic agent or diagnostic agent, e.g., in associated methods.


One aspect relates to a nucleic acid or a composition comprising it as disclosed herein for use in the prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome.


One aspect relates to the use of a nucleic acid or a composition comprising it as disclosed herein in the prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome.


One aspect relates to the use of a nucleic acid or a composition comprising it as disclosed herein in the preparation of a medicament for the prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome.


One aspect relates to a method of prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome comprising administering a pharmaceutically effective dose or amount of a nucleic acid or composition comprising it as disclosed herein to an individual in need of treatment, preferably wherein the nucleic acid or composition is administered to the subject subcutaneously, intravenously or by oral, rectal, pulmonary, intramuscular or intraperitoneal administration.


DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a nucleic acid which is double-stranded and which comprises a sequence homologous to an expressed RNA transcript of CFB, and compositions thereof.


These nucleic acids, conjugates thereof, and compositions comprising them, may be used in the prophylaxis and treatment of a variety of diseases, disorders and syndromes in which reduced expression of the CFB gene product is desirable.


A first aspect of the invention is a double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of CFB, preferably in a cell, wherein the nucleic acid comprises a first strand and a second strand, wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 5a. These nucleic acids among others have the advantage of being active in various species that are relevant for pre-clinical and clinical development and/or of having few relevant off-target effects. Having few relevant off-target effects means that a nucleic acid specifically inhibits the intended target and does not significantly inhibit other genes or inhibits only one or few other genes at a therapeutically acceptable level.


For example, the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence may comprise a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences listed in Table 1.


Preferably, the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of at least 16, more preferably at least 17, yet more preferably at least 18 and most preferably all 19 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides, preferably by no more than 2 nucleotides, more preferably by no more than 1 nucleotide, and most preferably not differing by any nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 5a.


For example, the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence may comprise a sequence of at least 16, more preferably at least 17, yet more preferably at least 18 and most preferably all 19 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides, preferably by no more than 2 nucleotides, more preferably by no more than 1 nucleotide, and most preferably not differing by any nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences listed in Table 1.


Preferably, the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence of the nucleic acid consists of one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 5a. The sequence may however be modified by a number of nucleic acid modifications that do not change the identity of the nucleotide. For example, modifications of the backbone or sugar residues of the nucleic acid do not change the identity of the nucleotide because the base itself remains the same as in the reference sequence.


For example, the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence of the nucleic acid may consist of one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 1, optionally modified by one or more of said nucleic acid modifications.


A nucleic acid that comprises a sequence according to a reference sequence herein means that the nucleic acid comprises a sequence of contiguous nucleotides in the order as defined in the reference sequence.


When reference is made herein to a reference sequence comprising or consisting of nucleotides, this reference is not limited to the sequence with unmodified nucleotides. The same reference also encompasses the same nucleotide sequence in which one, several, such as two, three, four, five, six, seven or more, including all, nucleotides are modified by modifications such as 2′-OMe, 2′-F, a ligand, a linker, a 3′ end or 5′ end modification or any other modification. It also refers to sequences in which two or more nucleotides are linked to each other by the natural phosphodiester linkage or by any other linkage such as a phosphorothioate or a phosphorodithioate linkage.


A double-stranded nucleic acid is a nucleic acid in which the first strand and the second strand hybridise to each other over at least part of their lengths and are therefore capable of forming a duplex region under physiological conditions, such as in PBS at 37° C. at a concentration of 1 μM of each strand. The first and second strand are preferably able to hybridise to each other and therefore to form a duplex region over a region of at least 15 nucleotides, preferably 16, 17, 18 or 19 nucleotides. This duplex region comprises nucleotide base parings between the two strands, preferably based on Watson-Crick base pairing and/or wobble base pairing (such as GU base pairing). All the nucleotides of the two strands within a duplex region do not have to base pair to each other to form a duplex region. A certain number of mismatches, deletions or insertions between the nucleotide sequences of the two strands are acceptable. Overhangs on either end of the first or second strand or unpaired nucleotides at either end of the double-stranded nucleic acid are also possible. The double-stranded nucleic acid is preferably a stable double-stranded nucleic acid under physiological conditions, and preferably has a melting temperature (Tm) of 45° C. or more, preferably 50° C. or more, and more preferably 55° C. or more for example in PBS at a concentration of 1 μM of each strand.


A stable double-stranded nucleic acid under physiological conditions is a double-stranded nucleic acid that has a Tm of 45° C. or more, preferably 50° C. or more, and more preferably 55° C. or more, for example in PBS at a concentration of 1 μM of each strand.


The first strand and the second strand are preferably capable of forming a duplex region (i.e., are complementary to each other) over i) at least a portion of their lengths, preferably over at least 15 nucleotides of both of their lengths, ii) over the entire length of the first strand, iii) over the entire length of the second strand or iv) over the entire length of both the first and the second strand. Strands being complementary to each other over a certain length means that the strands are able to base pair to each other, either via Watson-Crick or wobble base pairing, over that length. Each nucleotide of the length does not necessarily have to be able to base pair with its counterpart in the other strand over the entire given length as long as a stable double-stranded nucleotide under physiological conditions can be formed. It is however, preferred, in certain embodiments, if each nucleotide of the length can base pair with its counterpart in the other strand over the entire given length.


A certain number of mismatches, deletions or insertions between the first strand and the target sequence, or between the first strand and the second strand can be tolerated in the context of the siRNA and even have the potential in certain cases to increase RNA interference (e.g., inhibition) activity.


The inhibition activity of the nucleic acids according to the present invention relies on the formation of a duplex region between all or a portion of the first strand and a portion of a target nucleic acid. The portion of the target nucleic acid that forms a duplex region with the first strand, defined as beginning with the first base pair formed between the first strand and the target sequence and ending with the last base pair formed between the first strand and the target sequence, inclusive, is the target nucleic acid sequence or simply, target sequence. The duplex region formed between the first strand and the second strand need not be the same as the duplex region formed between the first strand and the target sequence. That is, the second strand may have a sequence different from the target sequence; however, the first strand must be able to form a duplex structure with both the second strand and the target sequence, at least under physiological conditions.


The complementarity between the first strand and the target sequence may be perfect (i.e., 100% identity with no nucleotide mismatches or insertions or deletions in the first strand as compared to the target sequence).


The complementarity between the first strand and the target sequence may not be perfect. The complementarity may be from about 70% to about 100%. More specifically, the complementarity may be at least 70%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% and intermediate values.


The identity between the first strand and the complementary sequence of the target sequence may range from about 75% to about 100%. More specifically, the complementarity may be at least 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% and intermediate values, provided a nucleic acid is capable of reducing or inhibiting the expression of CFB.


A nucleic acid having less than 100% complementarity between the first strand and the target sequence may be able to reduce the expression of CFB to the same level as a nucleic acid having perfect complementarity between the first strand and target sequence. Alternatively, it may be able to reduce expression of CFB to a level that is 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 35%, 40%, 45%, 50%, 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 98%, 99% or 100% of the level of reduction achieved by the nucleic acid with perfect complementarity.


A nucleic acid of the present disclosure may be a nucleic acid wherein:

    • (a) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (b) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (c) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (d) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (e) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (f) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (g) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (h) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (i) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence consists of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (j) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists essentially of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence consists essentially of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5a;
    • (k) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5a, wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown Table 5a;
    • (l) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5a, wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5a, and wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a contiguous region of from 17-25 nucleotides in length, preferably of from 18-24 nucleotides in length, complementary to the CFB transcript of SEQ ID NO. 758; and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5a;
    • (m) unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are present on a single strand wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length; or
    • (n) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are on two separate strands that are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length.


For example, a nucleic acid of the present disclosure may be a nucleic acid wherein: (a) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;

    • (b) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (c) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (d) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (e) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (f) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (g) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (h) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (i) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence consists of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (j) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists essentially of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence consists essentially of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1;
    • (k) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1, wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown Table 1;
    • (l) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1, wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1, and wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a contiguous region of from 17-25 nucleotides in length, preferably of from 18-24 nucleotides in length, complementary to the CFB transcript of SEQ ID NO. 758; and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1;
    • (m) unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are present on a single strand wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length; or
    • (n) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are on two separate strands that are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length.


By a “corresponding” second strand is meant a second strand present in the same duplex as a given first strand in Table 5a, 5b or 5c, or listed as a corresponding second strand sequence in Table 1 or Table 2, as the case may be. That is to say, a first strand and its corresponding second strand are designated as the “A” and “B” strands respectively of a duplex having a given Duplex ID in Table 5a, 5b or 5c, or are described as such in Tables 1 and 2.












TABLE 1







First
Corresponding second



strand sequence
strand sequence



(SEQ ID No.)
(SEQ ID No.)



















57
58



71
72



295
296



201
202



47
48



319
320



249
250



721
48



295
296



722
202



723
72



724
58










In one aspect, if the 5′-most nucleotide of the first strand is a nucleotide other than A or U, this nucleotide is replaced by an A or U. Preferably, if the 5′-most nucleotide of the first strand is a nucleotide other than U, this nucleotide is replaced by U, and more preferably by U with a 5′ vinylphosphonate.


When a nucleic acid of the invention does not comprise the entire sequence of a reference first strand and/or second strand sequence (as for example given in Tables 1, 2, 5a, 5b or 5c), or one or both strands differ from the corresponding reference sequence by one, two or three nucleotides, this nucleic acid preferably retains at least 30%, more preferably at least 50%, more preferably at least 70%, more preferably at least 80%, even more preferably at least 90%, yet more preferably at least 95% and most preferably at least 100% of the CFB inhibition activity compared to the inhibition activity of the corresponding nucleic acid that comprises the entire first strand and second strand reference sequences in a comparable experiment.


Nucleic acids that are capable of hybridising under physiological conditions are nucleic acids that are capable of forming base pairs, preferably Watson-Crick or wobble base-pairs, between at least a portion of the opposed nucleotides in the strands so as to form at least a duplex region. Such a double-stranded nucleic acid is preferably a stable double-stranded nucleic acid under physiological conditions (for example in PBS at 37° C. at a concentration of 1 μM of each strand), meaning that under such conditions, the two strands stay hybridised to each other. The Tm of the double-stranded nucleotide is preferably 45° C. or more, preferably 50° C. or more and more preferably 55° C. or more.


One aspect of the present invention relates to a nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of CFB, wherein the nucleic acid comprises a first sequence of at least 15, preferably at least 16, more preferably at least 17, yet more preferably at least 18 and most preferably all nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides, preferably no more than 2 nucleotides, more preferably no more than 1 nucleotide and most preferably not differing by any nucleotide from any of the first strand unmodified equivalent sequences of Table 5a, or of Table 1, the first sequence being able to hybridise to a target gene transcript (such as an mRNA) under physiological conditions. Preferably, the nucleic acid further comprises a second sequence of at least 15, preferably at least 16, more preferably at least 17, yet more preferably at least 18 and most preferably all nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides, preferably no more than 2 nucleotides, more preferably no more than 1 nucleotide and most preferably not differing by any nucleotide from any of the corresponding second strand unmodified equivalent sequences of Table 5a, or of Table 1, the second sequence being able to hybridise to the first sequence under physiological conditions and preferably the nucleic acid being an siRNA that is capable of inhibiting CFB expression via the RNAi pathway.


One aspect relates to any double-stranded nucleic acid as disclosed in Tables 5a, 5b or 5c, each of which may be referred to by a given Duplex ID, preferably for inhibiting expression of CFB, provided that the double-stranded nucleic acid is able to inhibit expression of CFB. These nucleic acids are all siRNAs. Some (Table 5a) are composed of unmodified nucleotide sequences. Others (Table 5b) comprise various nucleotide and/or backbone modifications. Still others (Table 5c) are conjugates comprising GalNAc moieties that can be specifically targeted to cells with GalNAc receptors, such as hepatocytes.


One aspect relates to a double-stranded nucleic acid that is capable of inhibiting expression of CFB, preferably in a cell, for use as a therapeutic or diagnostic agent, e.g., in associated therapeutic or diagnostic methods, wherein the nucleic acid preferably comprises or consists of a first strand and a second strand and preferably wherein the first strand comprises sequences sufficiently complementary to a CFB mRNA so as to mediate RNA interference.


The nucleic acids described herein may be capable of inhibiting the expression of CFB. Inhibition may be complete, i.e., 0% remaining expression. Inhibition of CFB expression may be partial, i.e., it may be 15%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95% or more, or intermediate values of inhibition of the level of CFB expression in the absence of a nucleic acid of the invention. The level of inhibition may be measured by comparing a treated sample with an untreated sample or with a sample treated with a control such as for example a siRNA that does not target CFB. Inhibition may be measured by measuring CFB mRNA and/or protein levels or levels of a biomarker or indicator that correlates with CFB presence or activity. It may be measured in cells that may have been treated in vitro with a nucleic acid described herein. Alternatively, or in addition, inhibition may be measured in cells, such as hepatocytes, or tissue, such as liver tissue, or an organ, such as the liver, or in a body fluid such as blood, serum, lymph or any other body part or fluid that has been taken from a subject previously treated with a nucleic acid disclosed herein. Preferably, inhibition of CFB expression is determined by comparing the CFB mRNA level measured in CFB-expressing cells after 24 or 48 hours in vitro treatment with a double-stranded RNA disclosed herein under ideal conditions (see the examples for appropriate concentrations and conditions) to the CFB mRNA level measured in control cells that were untreated or mock treated or treated with a control double-stranded RNA under the same conditions.


One aspect of the present invention relates to a nucleic acid, wherein the first strand and the second strand are present on a single strand of a nucleic acid that loops around so that the first strand and the second strand are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region.


Preferably, the first strand and the second strand of the nucleic acid are separate strands. The two separate strands are preferably each 17-25 nucleotides in length, more preferably 18-25 nucleotides in length. The two strands may be of the same or different lengths. The first strand may be 17-25 nucleotides in length, preferably it may be 18-24 nucleotides in length, it may be 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 or 24 nucleotides in length. Most preferably, the first strand is 19 nucleotides in length. The second strand may independently be 17-25 nucleotides in length, preferably it may be 18-24 nucleotides in length, it may be 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 or 24 nucleotides in length. More preferably, the second strand is 18 or 19 or 20 nucleotides in length, and most preferably it is 19 nucleotides in length.


Preferably, the first strand and the second strand of the nucleic acid form a duplex region of 17-25 nucleotides in length. More preferably, the duplex region is 18-24 nucleotides in length. The duplex region may be 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length. In the most preferred embodiment, the duplex region is 18 or 19 nucleotides in length. The duplex region is defined here as the region between and including the 5′-most nucleotide of the first strand that is base paired to a nucleotide of the second strand to the 3′-most nucleotide of the first strand that is base paired to a nucleotide of the second strand. The duplex region may comprise nucleotides in either or both strands that are not base-paired to a nucleotide in the other strand. It may comprise one, two, three or four such nucleotides on the first strand and/or on the second strand. However, preferably, the duplex region consists of 17-25 consecutive nucleotide base pairs. That is to say that it preferably comprises 17-25 consecutive nucleotides on both of the strands that all base pair to a nucleotide in the other strand. More preferably, the duplex region consists of 18 or 19 consecutive nucleotide base pairs, most preferably 18.


In each of the embodiments disclosed herein, the nucleic acid may be blunt ended at both ends; have an overhang at one end and a blunt end at the other end; or have an overhang at both ends.


The nucleic acid may have an overhang at one end and a blunt end at the other end. The nucleic acid may have an overhang at both ends. The nucleic acid may be blunt ended at both ends. The nucleic acid may be blunt ended at the end with the 5′ end of the first strand and the 3′ end of the second strand or at the 3′ end of the first strand and the 5′ end of the second strand.


The nucleic acid may comprise an overhang at a 3′ or 5 end. The nucleic acid may have a 3′ overhang on the first strand. The nucleic acid may have a 3′ overhang on the second strand. The nucleic acid may have a 5′ overhang on the first strand. The nucleic acid may have a 5′ overhang on the second strand. The nucleic acid may have an overhang at both the 5′ end and 3′ end of the first strand. The nucleic acid may have an overhang at both the 5′ end and 3′ end of the second strand. The nucleic acid may have a 5′ overhang on the first strand and a 3′ overhang on the second strand. The nucleic acid may have a 3′ overhang on the first strand and a 5′ overhang on the second strand. The nucleic acid may have a 3′ overhang on the first strand and a 3′ overhang on the second strand. The nucleic acid may have a 5′ overhang on the first strand and a 5′ overhang on the second strand.


An overhang at the 3′ end or 5′ end of the second strand or the first strand may consist of 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 nucleotides in length. Optionally, an overhang may consist of 1 or 2 nucleotides, which may or may not be modified.


In one embodiment, the 5′ end of the first strand is a single-stranded overhang of one, two or three nucleotides, preferably of one nucleotide.


Preferably, the nucleic acid is an siRNA. siRNAs are short interfering or short silencing RNAs that are able to inhibit the expression of a target gene through the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway. Inhibition occurs through targeted degradation of mRNA transcripts of the target gene after transcription. The siRNA forms part of the RISC complex. The RISC complex specifically targets the target RNA by sequence complementarity of the first (antisense) strand with the target sequence.


Preferably, the nucleic acid mediates RNA interference (RNAi). Preferably, the nucleic acid mediates RNA interference with an efficacy of at least 50% inhibition, more preferably at least 70%, more preferably at least 80%, even more preferably at least 90%, yet more preferably at least 95% and most preferably 100% inhibition. The inhibition efficacy is preferably measured by comparing the CFB mRNA level in cells, such as hepatocytes, treated with a CFB specific siRNA to the CFB mRNA level in cells treated with a control in a comparable experiment. The control can be a treatment with a non-CFB targeting siRNA or without a siRNA. The nucleic acid, or at least the first strand of the nucleic acid, is therefore preferably able to be incorporated into the RISC complex. As a result, the nucleic acid, or at least the first strand of the nucleic acid, is therefore able to guide the RISC complex to a specific target RNA with which the nucleic acid, or at least the first strand of the nucleic acid, is at least partially complementary. The RISC complex then specifically cleaves this target RNA and as a result leads to inhibition of the expression of the gene from which the RNA stems.


Nucleic Acid Modifications

Nucleic acids discussed herein include unmodified RNA as well as RNA which has been modified, e.g., to improve efficacy or stability. Unmodified RNA refers to a molecule in which the components of the nucleic acid, namely sugars, bases, and phosphate moieties, are the same or essentially the same as those which occur in nature, for example as occur naturally in the human body. The term “modified nucleotide” as used herein refers to a nucleotide in which one or more of the components of the nucleotide, namely the sugar, base, and phosphate moiety, is/are different from those which occur in nature. The term “modified nucleotide” also refers in certain cases to molecules that are not nucleotides in the strict sense of the term because they lack, or have a substitute of, an essential component of a nucleotide, such as the sugar, base or phosphate moiety. A nucleic acid comprising such modified nucleotides is still to be understood as being a nucleic acid, even if one or more of the nucleotides of the nucleic acid has been replaced by a modified nucleotide that lacks, or has a substitution of, an essential component of a nucleotide.


Modifications of the nucleic acid of the present invention generally provide a powerful tool in overcoming potential limitations including, but not limited to, in vitro and in vivo stability and bioavailability inherent to native RNA molecules. The nucleic acids according to the invention may be modified by chemical modifications. Modified nucleic acids can also minimise the possibility of inducing interferon activity in humans. Modifications can further enhance the functional delivery of a nucleic acid to a target cell. The modified nucleic acids of the present invention may comprise one or more chemically modified ribonucleotides of either or both of the first strand or the second strand. A ribonucleotide may comprise a chemical modification of the base, sugar or phosphate moieties. The ribonucleic acid may be modified by substitution with or insertion of analogues of nucleic acids or bases.


Throughout the description of the invention, “same or common modification” means the same modification to any nucleotide, be that A, G, C or U modified with a group such as a methyl group (2′-OMe) or a fluoro group (2′-F). For example, 2′-F-dU, 2′-F-dA, 2′-F-dC, 2′-F-dG are all considered to be the same or common modification, as are 2′-OMe-rU, 2′-OMe-rA; 2′-OMe-rC; 2′-OMe-rG. In contrast, a 2′-F modification is a different modification compared to a 2′-OMe modification.


Preferably, at least one nucleotide of the first and/or second strand of the nucleic acid is a modified nucleotide, preferably a non-naturally occurring nucleotide such as preferably a 2′-F modified nucleotide.


A modified nucleotide can be a nucleotide with a modification of the sugar group. The 2′ hydroxyl group (OH) can be modified or replaced with a number of different “oxy” or “deoxy” substituents.


Examples of “oxy”-2′ hydroxyl group modifications include alkoxy or aryloxy (OR, e.g., R═H, alkyl (such as methyl), cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, heteroaryl or sugar); polyethyleneglycols (PEG), O(CH2CH2O)nCH2CH2OR; “locked” nucleic acids (LNA) in which the 2′ hydroxyl is connected, e.g., by a methylene bridge, to the 4′ carbon of the same ribose sugar; O-AMINE (AMINE=NH2, alkylamino, dialkylamino, heterocyclyl, arylamino, diaryl amino, heteroaryl amino, or diheteroaryl amino, ethylene diamine, or polyamino) and aminoalkoxy, O(CH2)nAMINE, (e.g., AMINE=NH2, alkylamino, dialkylamino, heterocyclyl, arylamino, diaryl amino, heteroaryl amino, or diheteroaryl amino, ethylene diamine, or polyamino). “Deoxy” modifications include hydrogen, halogen, amino (e.g., NH2, alkylamino, dialkylamino, heterocyclyl, arylamino, diaryl amino, heteroaryl amino, diheteroaryl amino, or amino acid); NH(CH2CH2NH)nCH2CH2-AMINE (AMINE=NH2, alkylamino, dialkylamino, heterocyclyl, arylamino, diaryl amino, heteroaryl amino, or diheteroaryl amino), —NHC(O)R (R=alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, heteroaryl or sugar), cyano; mercapto; alkyl-thio-alkyl; thioalkoxy; and alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, alkenyl and alkynyl, which may be optionally substituted with e.g., an amino functionality. Other substituents of certain embodiments include 2′-methoxyethyl, 2′-OCH3, 2′-O-allyl, 2′-C-allyl, and 2′-fluoro.


The sugar group can also contain one or more carbons that possess the opposite stereochemical configuration than that of the corresponding carbon in ribose. Thus, a modified nucleotide may contain a sugar such as arabinose.


Modified nucleotides can also include “abasic” sugars, which lack a nucleobase at C-1′. These abasic sugars can further contain modifications at one or more of the constituent sugar atoms.


The 2′ modifications may be used in combination with one or more phosphate internucleoside linker modifications (e.g., phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate).


One or more nucleotides of a nucleic acid of the present invention may be modified. The nucleic acid may comprise at least one modified nucleotide. The modified nucleotide may be in the first strand. The modified nucleotide may be in the second strand. The modified nucleotide may be in the duplex region. The modified nucleotide may be outside the duplex region, i.e., in a single-stranded region. The modified nucleotide may be on the first strand and may be outside the duplex region. The modified nucleotide may be on the second strand and may be outside the duplex region. The 3′-terminal nucleotide of the first strand may be a modified nucleotide. The 3′-terminal nucleotide of the second strand may be a modified nucleotide. The 5′-terminal nucleotide of the first strand may be a modified nucleotide. The 5′-terminal nucleotide of the second strand may be a modified nucleotide.


A nucleic acid of the invention may have 1 modified nucleotide or a nucleic acid of the invention may have about 2-4 modified nucleotides, or a nucleic acid may have about 4-6 modified nucleotides, about 6-8 modified nucleotides, about 8-10 modified nucleotides, about 10-12 modified nucleotides, about 12-14 modified nucleotides, about 14-16 modified nucleotides about 16-18 modified nucleotides, about 18-20 modified nucleotides, about 20-22 modified nucleotides, about 22-24 modified nucleotides, about 24-26 modified nucleotides or about 26-28 modified nucleotides. In each case the nucleic acid comprising said modified nucleotides retains at least 50% of its activity as compared to the same nucleic acid but without said modified nucleotides or vice versa. The nucleic acid may retain 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95% or 100% and intermediate values of its activity as compared to the same nucleic acid but without said modified nucleotides, or may have more than 100% of the activity of the same nucleic acid without said modified nucleotides.


The modified nucleotide may be a purine or a pyrimidine. At least half of the purines may be modified. At least half of the pyrimidines may be modified. All of the purines may be modified. All of the pyrimidines may be modified. The modified nucleotides may be selected from the group consisting of a 3′ terminal deoxy thymine (dT) nucleotide, a 2′-O-methyl (2′-OMe) modified nucleotide, a 2′ modified nucleotide, a 2′ deoxy modified nucleotide, a locked nucleotide, an abasic nucleotide, a 2′ amino modified nucleotide, a 2′ alkyl modified nucleotide, a 2′-deoxy-2′-fluoro (2′-F) modified nucleotide, a morpholino nucleotide, a phosphoramidate, a non-natural base comprising nucleotide, a nucleotide comprising a 5′-phosphorothioate group, a nucleotide comprising a 5′ phosphate or 5′ phosphate mimic and a terminal nucleotide linked to a cholesteryl derivative or a dodecanoic acid bisdecylamide group.


The nucleic acid may comprise a nucleotide comprising a modified base, wherein the base is selected from 2-aminoadenosine, 2,6-diaminopurine, inosine, pyridin-4-one, pyridin-2-one, phenyl, pseudouracil, 2, 4, 6-trimethoxy benzene, 3-methyl uracil, dihydrouridine, naphthyl, aminophenyl, 5-alkylcytidine (e.g., 5-methylcytidine), 5-alkyluridine (e.g., ribothymidine), 5-halouridine (e.g., 5-bromouridine), 6-azapyrimidine, 6-alkylpyrimidine (e.g. 6-methyluridine), propyne, quesosine, 2-thiouridine, 4-thiouridine, wybutosine, wybutoxosine, 4-acetylcytidine, 5-(carboxyhydroxymethyl)uridine, 5′-carboxymethylaminomethyl-2-thiouridine, 5-carboxymethylaminomethyluridine, beta-D-galactosylqueosine, 1-methyladenosine, 1-methylinosine, 2,2-dimethylguanosine, 3-methylcytidine, 2-methyladenosine, 2-methylguanosine, N6-methyladenosine, 7-methylguanosine, 5-methoxyaminomethyl-2-thiouridine, 5-methylaminomethyluridine, 5-methylcarbonylmethyluridine, 5-methyloxyuridine, 5-methyl-2-thiouridine, 2-methylthio-N6-isopentenyladenosine, beta-D-mannosylqueosine, uridine-5-oxyacetic acid and 2-thiocytidine.


Many of the modifications described herein and that occur within a nucleic acid will be repeated within a polynucleotide molecule, such as a modification of a base, or a phosphate moiety, or a non-linking O of a phosphate moiety. In some cases, the modification will occur at all of the possible positions/nucleotides in the polynucleotide but in many cases it will not. A modification may only occur at a 3′ or 5′ terminal position, may only occur in a terminal region, such as at a position on a terminal nucleotide or in the last 2, 3, 4, 5, or 10 nucleotides of a strand. A modification may occur in a double-strand region, a single-strand region, or in both. A modification may occur only in the double-strand region of a nucleic acid of the invention or may only occur in a single-strand region of a nucleic acid of the invention. A phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate modification at a non-linking O position may only occur at one or both termini, may only occur in a terminal region, e.g., at a position on a terminal nucleotide or in the last 2, 3, 4 or 5 nucleotides of a strand, or may occur in duplex and/or in single-strand regions, particularly at termini. The 5′ end and/or 3′ end may be phosphorylated.


Stability of a nucleic acid of the invention may be increased by including particular bases in overhangs, or by including modified nucleotides, in single-strand overhangs, e.g., in a 5′ or 3′ overhang, or in both. Purine nucleotides may be included in overhangs. All or some of the bases in a 3′ or 5′ overhang may be modified. Modifications can include the use of modifications at the 2′ OH group of the ribose sugar, the use of deoxyribonucleotides, instead of ribonucleotides, and modifications in the phosphate group, such as phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate modifications. Overhangs need not be homologous with the target sequence.


Nucleases can hydrolyse nucleic acid phosphodiester bonds. However, chemical modifications to nucleic acids can confer improved properties, and, can render oligoribonucleotides more stable to nucleases.


Modified nucleic acids, as used herein, can include one or more of:

    • (i) alteration, e.g., replacement, of one or both of the non-linking phosphate oxygens and/or of one or more of the linking phosphate oxygens (referred to as linking even if at the 5′ and 3′ terminus of the nucleic acid of the invention);
    • (ii) alteration, e.g., replacement, of a constituent of the ribose sugar, e.g., of the 2′ hydroxyl on the ribose sugar;
    • (iii) replacement of the phosphate moiety with “dephospho” linkers;
    • (iv) modification or replacement of a naturally occurring base;
    • (v) replacement or modification of the ribose-phosphate backbone; and
    • (vi) modification of the 3′ end or 5′ end of the first strand and/or the second strand, e.g., removal, modification or replacement of a terminal phosphate group or conjugation of a moiety, e.g., a fluorescently labelled moiety, to either the 3′ or 5′ end of one or both strands.


The terms “replacement”, “modification” and “alteration” indicate a difference from a naturally occurring molecule.


Specific modifications are discussed in more detail below.


The nucleic acid may comprise one or more nucleotides on the second and/or first strands that are modified. Alternating nucleotides may be modified, to form modified nucleotides.


“Alternating” as described herein means to occur one after another in a regular way. In other words, alternating means to occur in turn repeatedly. For example, if one nucleotide is modified, the next contiguous nucleotide is not modified and the following contiguous nucleotide is modified and so on. One nucleotide may be modified with a first modification, the next contiguous nucleotide may be modified with a second modification and the following contiguous nucleotide is modified with the first modification and so on, where the first and second modifications are different.


Some representative modified nucleic acid sequences of the present invention are shown in the examples. These examples are meant to be representative and not limiting.


In one aspect of the nucleic acid, at least nucleotides 2 and 14 of the first strand are modified, preferably by a first common modification, the nucleotides being numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand. The first modification is preferably 2′-F.


In one aspect, at least one, several or preferably all the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified, preferably by a first common modification, the nucleotides being numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand. The first modification is preferably 2′-F.


In one aspect, at least one, several or preferably all the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified, the nucleotides being numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand. Preferably, they are modified by a second modification. This second modification is preferably different from the first modification if the nucleic acid also comprises a first modification, for example of nucleotides 2 and 14 or of all the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand. The first modification is preferably any 2′ ribose modification that is of the same size or smaller in volume than a 2′-OH group, or a locked nucleic acid (LNA), or an unlocked nucleic acid (UNA), or a 2′-Fluoroarabino Nucleic Acid (FANA) modification. A 2′ ribose modification that is of the same size or smaller in volume than a 2′-OH group can for example be a 2′-F, 2′-H, 2′-halo, or 2′-NH2. The second modification is preferably any 2′ ribose modification that is larger in volume than a 2′-OH group. A 2′ ribose modification that is larger in volume than a 2′-OH group can for example be a 2′-OMe, 2′-O-MOE (2′-O-methoxyethyl), 2′-O-allyl or 2′-O-alkyl, with the proviso that the nucleic is capable of reducing the expression of the target gene to at least the same extent as the same nucleic acid without the modification(s) under comparable conditions. The first modification is preferably 2′-F and/or the second modification is preferably 2′-OMe.


In the context of this disclosure, the size or volume of a substituent, such as a 2′ ribose modification, is preferably measured as the van der Waals volume.


In one aspect, at least one, several or preferably all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an even-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified, preferably by a third modification. Preferably in the same nucleic acid nucleotides 2 and 14 or all the even numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified with a first modification. In addition, or alternatively, the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified with a second modification. Preferably, the third modification is different from the first modification and/or the third modification is the same as the second modification. The first modification is preferably any 2′ ribose modification that is of the same size or smaller in volume than a 2′-OH group, or a locked nucleic acid (LNA), or an unlocked nucleic acid (UNA), or a 2′-Fluoroarabino Nucleic Acid (FANA) modification. A 2′ ribose modification that is of the same size or smaller in volume than a 2′-OH group can for example be a 2′-F, 2′-H, 2′-halo, or 2′-NH2. The second and/or third modification is preferably any 2′ ribose modification that is larger in volume than a 2′-OH group. A 2′ ribose modification that is larger in volume than a 2′-OH group can for example be a 2′-OMe, 2′-O-MOE (2′-O-methoxyethyl), 2′-O-allyl or 2′-O-alkyl, with the proviso that the nucleic is capable of reducing the expression of the target gene to at least the same extent as the same nucleic acid without the modification(s) under comparable conditions. The first modification is preferably 2′-F and/or the second and/or third modification is/are preferably 2′-OMe. The nucleotides on the first strand are numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand.


A nucleotide of the second strand that is in a position corresponding, for example, to an even-numbered nucleotide of the first strand is a nucleotide of the second strand that is base-paired to an even-numbered nucleotide of the first strand.


In one aspect, at least one, several or preferably all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an odd-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified, preferably by a fourth modification. Preferably in the same nucleic acid nucleotides 2 and 14 or all the even numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified with a first modification.


In addition, or alternatively, the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified with a second modification. In addition, or alternatively, all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an even-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified with a third modification. The fourth modification is preferably different from the second modification and preferably different from the third modification and the fourth modification is preferably the same as the first modification. The first and/or fourth modification is preferably any 2′ ribose modification that is of the same size or smaller in volume than a 2′-OH group, or a locked nucleic acid (LNA), or an unlocked nucleic acid (UNA), or a 2′-Fluoroarabino Nucleic Acid (FANA) modification. A 2′ ribose modification that is of the same size or smaller in volume than a 2′-OH group can for example be a 2′-F, 2′-H, 2′-halo, or 2′-NH2. The second and/or third modification is preferably any 2′ ribose modification that is larger in volume than a 2′-OH group. A 2′ ribose modification that is larger in volume than a 2′-OH group can for example be a 2′-OMe, 2′-O-MOE (2′-O-methoxyethyl), 2′-O-allyl or 2′-O-alkyl, with the proviso that the nucleic is capable of reducing the expression of the target gene to at least the same extent as the same nucleic acid without the modification(s) under comparable conditions. The first and/or the fourth modification is/are preferably a 2′-OMe modification and/or the second and/or third modification is/are preferably a 2′-F modification. The nucleotides on the first strand are numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand.


In one aspect of the nucleic acid, the nucleotide/nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to nucleotide 11 or nucleotide 13 or nucleotides 11 and 13 or nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand is/are modified by a fourth modification. Preferably, all the nucleotides of the second strand other than the nucleotide/nucleotides in a position corresponding to nucleotide 11 or nucleotide 13 or nucleotides 11 and 13 or nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand is/are modified by a third modification. Preferably in the same nucleic acid nucleotides 2 and 14 or all the even numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified with a first modification. In addition, or alternatively, the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified with a second modification. The fourth modification is preferably different from the second modification and preferably different from the third modification and the fourth modification is preferably the same as the first modification. The first and/or fourth modification is preferably any 2′ ribose modification that is of the same size or smaller in volume than a 2′-OH group, or a locked nucleic acid (LNA), or an unlocked nucleic acid (UNA), or a 2′-Fluoroarabino Nucleic Acid (FANA) modification. A 2′ ribose modification that is of the same size or smaller in volume than a 2′-OH group can for example be a 2′-F, 2′-H, 2′-halo, or 2′-NH2. The second and/or third modification is preferably any 2′ ribose modification that is larger in volume than a 2′-OH group. A 2′ ribose modification that is larger in volume than a 2′-OH group can for example be a 2′-OMe, 2′-O-MOE (2′-O-methoxyethyl), 2′-O-allyl or 2′-O-alkyl, with the proviso that the nucleic is capable of reducing the expression of the target gene to at least the same extent as the same nucleic acid without the modification(s) under comparable conditions. The first and/or the fourth modification is/are preferably a 2′-OMe modification and/or the second and/or third modification is/are preferably a 2′-F modification. The nucleotides on the first strand are numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand.


In one aspect of the nucleic acid, all the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a first modification, all the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a second modification, all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an even-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified by a third modification, all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an odd-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified by a fourth modification, wherein the first and/or fourth modification is/are 2′-F and/or the second and/or third modification is/are 2′-OMe.


In one aspect of the nucleic acid, all the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a first modification, all the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a second modification, all the nucleotides of the second strand in positions corresponding to nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand are modified by a fourth modification, all the nucleotides of the second strand other than the nucleotides corresponding to nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand are modified by a third modification, wherein the first and fourth modification are 2′-F and the second and third modification are 2′-OMe. In one embodiment in this aspect, the 3′ terminal nucleotide of the second strand is an inverted RNA nucleotide (i.e., the nucleotide is linked to the 3′ end of the strand through its 3′ carbon, rather than through its 5′ carbon as would normally be the case). When the 3′ terminal nucleotide of the second strand is an inverted RNA nucleotide, the inverted RNA nucleotide is preferably an unmodified nucleotide in the sense that it does not comprise any modifications compared to the natural nucleotide counterpart. Specifically, the inverted RNA nucleotide is preferably a 2′-OH nucleotide. Preferably, in this aspect when the 3′ terminal nucleotide of the second strand is an inverted RNA nucleotide, the nucleic acid is blunt-ended at least at the end that comprises the 5′ end of the first strand.


One aspect of the present invention is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein for inhibiting expression of the CFB gene, preferably in a cell, wherein said first strand includes modified nucleotides or unmodified nucleotides at a plurality of positions in order to facilitate processing of the nucleic acid by RISC.


In one aspect, “facilitate processing by RISC” means that the nucleic acid can be processed by RISC, for example any modification present will permit the nucleic acid to be processed by RISC and preferably, will be beneficial to processing by RISC, suitably such that siRNA activity can take place.


A nucleic acid as disclosed herein, wherein the nucleotides at positions 2 and 14 from the 5′ end of the first strand are not modified with a 2′ OMe modification, and the nucleotide/nucleotides on the second strand which corresponds to position 11 or position 13 or positions 11 and 13 or positions 11, 12 and 13 of the first strand is/are not modified with a 2′-OMe modification (in other words, they are not modified or are modified with a modification other than 2′-OMe).


In one aspect, the nucleotide on the second strand which corresponds to position 13 of the first strand is the nucleotide that forms a base pair with position 13 (from the 5′ end) of the first strand.


In one aspect, the nucleotide on the second strand which corresponds to position 11 of the first strand is the nucleotide that forms a base pair with position 11 (from the 5′ end) of the first strand.


In one aspect, the nucleotide on the second strand which corresponds to position 12 of the first strand is the nucleotide that forms a base pair with position 12 (from the 5′ end) of the first strand.


For example, in a 19-mer nucleic acid which is double-stranded and blunt ended, position 13 (from the 5′ end) of the first strand would pair with position 7 (from the 5′ end) of the second strand. Position 11 (from the 5′ end) of the first strand would pair with position 9 (from the 5′ end) of the second strand. This nomenclature may be applied to other positions of the second strand.


In one aspect, in the case of a partially complementary first and second strand, the nucleotide on the second strand that “corresponds to” a position on the first strand may not necessarily form a base pair if that position is the position in which there is a mismatch, but the principle of the nomenclature still applies.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein, wherein the nucleotides at positions 2 and 14 from the 5′ end of the first strand are not modified with a 2′-OMe modification, and the nucleotides on the second strand which correspond to position 11, or 13, or 11 and 13, or 11-13 of the first strand are modified with a 2′-F modification.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein, wherein the nucleotides at positions 2 and 14 from the 5′ end of the first strand are modified with a 2′-F modification, and the nucleotides on the second strand which correspond to position 11, or 13, or 11 and 13, or 11-13 of the first strand are not modified with a 2′-OMe modification.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein, wherein the nucleotides at positions 2 and 14 from the 5′ end of the first strand are modified with a 2′-F modification, and the nucleotides on the second strand which correspond to position 11, or 13, or 11 and 13, or 11-13 of the first strand are modified with a 2′-F modification.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein wherein greater than 50% of the nucleotides of the first and/or second strand comprise a 2′-OMe modification, such as greater than 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, or 85%, or more, of the first and/or second strand comprise a 2′-OMe modification, preferably measured as a percentage of the total nucleotides of both the first and second strands.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein wherein greater than 50% of the nucleotides of the first and/or second strand comprise a naturally occurring RNA modification, such as wherein greater than 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, or 85% or more of the first and/or second strands comprise such a modification, preferably measured as a percentage of the total nucleotides of both the first and second strands. Suitable naturally occurring modifications include, as well as 2′-OMe, other 2′ sugar modifications, in particular a 2′-H modification resulting in a DNA nucleotide.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein comprising no more than 20%, such as no more than 15% such as no more than 10%, of nucleotides which have 2′ modifications that are not 2′-OMe modifications on the first and/or second strand, preferably as a percentage of the total nucleotides of both the first and second strands.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein, wherein the number of nucleotides in the first and/or second strand with a 2′-modification that is not a 2′-OMe modification is no more than 7, more preferably no more than 5, and most preferably no more than 3.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein comprising no more than 20%, (such as no more than 15% or no more than 10%) of 2′-F modifications on the first and/or second strand, preferably as a percentage of the total nucleotides of both strands.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein, wherein the number of nucleotides in the first and/or second strand with a 2′-F modification is no more than 7, more preferably no more than 5, and most preferably no more than 3.


One aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein, wherein all nucleotides are modified with a 2′-OMe modification except positions 2 and 14 from the 5′ end of the first strand and the nucleotides on the second strand which correspond to position 11, or 13, or 11 and 13, or 11-13 of the first strand. Preferably the nucleotides that are not modified with 2′-OMe are modified with fluoro at the 2′ position (2′-F modification).


In certain embodiments, a preferred aspect is a nucleic acid as disclosed herein wherein all nucleotides of the nucleic acid are modified at the 2′ position of the sugar. Preferably these nucleotides are modified with a 2′-F modification where the modification is not a 2′-OMe modification.


In one aspect the nucleic acid is modified on the first strand with alternating 2′-OMe modifications and 2-F modifications, and positions 2 and 14 (starting from the 5′ end) are modified with 2′-F. Preferably the second strand is modified with 2′-F modifications at nucleotides on the second strand which correspond to position 11, or 13, or 11 and 13, or 11-13 of the first strand. Preferably the second strand is modified with 2′-F modifications at positions 11-13 counting from the 3′ end starting at the first position of the complementary (double-stranded) region, and the remaining modifications are naturally occurring modifications, preferably 2′-OMe. The complementary region at least in this case starts at the first position of the second strand that has a corresponding nucleotide in the first strand, regardless of whether the two nucleotides are able to base pair to each other.


In one aspect of the nucleic acid, each of the nucleotides of the first strand and of the second strand is a modified nucleotide.


The term “odd numbered” as described herein means a number not divisible by two. Examples of odd numbers are 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 and so on. The term “even numbered” as described herein means a number which is evenly divisible by two. Examples of even numbers are 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 and so on.


Unless specifically stated otherwise, herein the nucleotides of the first strand are numbered contiguously starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand. Nucleotides of the second strand are numbered contiguously starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 3′ end of the second strand.


One or more nucleotides on the first and/or second strand may be modified, to form modified nucleotides. One or more of the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand may be modified.


One or more of the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand may be modified by at least a second modification, wherein the at least second modification is different from the modification on the one or more odd nucleotides. At least one of the one or more modified even numbered-nucleotides may be adjacent to at least one of the one or more modified odd-numbered nucleotides.


A plurality of odd-numbered nucleotides in the first strand may be modified in the nucleic acid of the invention. A plurality of even-numbered nucleotides in the first strand may be modified by a second modification. The first strand may comprise adjacent nucleotides that are modified by a common modification. The first strand may also comprise adjacent nucleotides that are modified by a second different modification (i.e., the first strand may comprise nucleotides that are adjacent to each other and modified by a first modification as well as other nucleotides that are adjacent to each other and modified by a second modification that is different to the first modification).


One or more of the odd-numbered nucleotides of the second strand (wherein the nucleotides are numbered contiguously starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 3′ end of the second strand) may be modified by a modification that is different to the modification of the odd-numbered nucleotides on the first strand (wherein the nucleotides are numbered contiguously starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand) and/or one or more of the even-numbered nucleotides of the second strand may be modified by the same modification of the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand. At least one of the one or more modified even-numbered nucleotides of the second strand may be adjacent to the one or more modified odd-numbered nucleotides. A plurality of odd-numbered nucleotides of the second strand may be modified by a common modification and/or a plurality of even-numbered nucleotides may be modified by the same modification that is present on the first stand odd-numbered nucleotides. A plurality of odd-numbered nucleotides on the second strand may be modified by a modification that is different from the modification of the first strand odd-numbered nucleotides.


The second strand may comprise adjacent nucleotides that are modified by a common modification, which may be a modification that is different from the modification of the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand.


In some aspects of the nucleic acid of the invention, each of the odd-numbered nucleotides in the first strand and each of the even-numbered nucleotides in the second strand may be modified with a common modification and, each of the even-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the first strand with a different modification and each of the odd-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the second strand with the different modification.


The nucleic acid of the invention may have the modified nucleotides of the first strand shifted by at least one nucleotide relative to the unmodified or differently modified nucleotides of the second strand.


In certain aspects, one ne or more or each of the odd numbered-nucleotides may be modified in the first strand and one or more or each of the even-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the second strand. One or more or each of the alternating nucleotides on either or both strands may be modified by a second modification. One or more or each of the even-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the first strand and one or more or each of the even-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the second strand. One or more or each of the alternating nucleotides on either or both strands may be modified by a second modification. One or more or each of the odd-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the first strand and one or more of the odd-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the second strand by a common modification. One or more or each of the alternating nucleotides on either or both strands may be modified by a second modification. One or more or each of the even-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the first strand and one or more or each of the odd-numbered nucleotides may be modified in the second strand by a common modification. One or more or each of the alternating nucleotides on either or both strands may be modified by a second modification.


The nucleic acid of the invention may comprise single- or double-stranded constructs that comprise at least two regions of alternating modifications in one or both of the strands. These alternating regions can comprise up to about 12 nucleotides but preferably comprise from about 3 to about 10 nucleotides. The regions of alternating nucleotides may be located at the termini of one or both strands of the nucleic acid of the invention. The nucleic acid may comprise from 4 to about 10 nucleotides of alternating nucleotides at each of the termini (3′ and 5) and these regions may be separated by from about 5 to about 12 contiguous unmodified or differently or commonly modified nucleotides.


The odd numbered nucleotides of the first strand may be modified and the even numbered nucleotides may be modified with a second modification. The second strand may comprise adjacent nucleotides that are modified with a common modification, which may be the same as the modification of the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand. One or more nucleotides of the second strand may also be modified with the second modification. One or more nucleotides with the second modification may be adjacent to each other and to nucleotides having a modification that is the same as the modification of the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand. The first strand may also comprise phosphorothioate linkages between the two nucleotides at the 3′ end and at the 5′ end or a phosphorodithioate linkage between the two nucleotides at the 3′ end. The second strand may comprise a phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate linkage between the two nucleotides at the 5′ end.


The second strand may also be conjugated to a ligand at the 5′ end. The nucleic acid of the invention may comprise a first strand comprising adjacent nucleotides that are modified with a common modification. One or more such nucleotides may be adjacent to one or more nucleotides which may be modified with a second modification. One or more nucleotides with the second modification may be adjacent. The second strand may comprise adjacent nucleotides that are modified with a common modification, which may be the same as one of the modifications of one or more nucleotides of the first strand. One or more nucleotides of the second strand may also be modified with the second modification. One or more nucleotides with the second modification may be adjacent. The first strand may also comprise phosphorothioate linkages between the two nucleotides at the 3′ end and at the 5′ end or a phosphorodithioate linkage between the two nucleotides at the 3′ end. The second strand may comprise a phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate linkage between the two nucleotides at the 3′ end. The second strand may also be conjugated to a ligand at the 5′ end.


The nucleotides numbered from 5′ to 3′ on the first strand and 3′ to 5′ on the second strand, 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23 and 25 may be modified by a modification on the first strand. The nucleotides numbered 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 and 24 may be modified by a second modification on the first strand. The nucleotides numbered 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23 may be modified by a modification on the second strand. The nucleotides numbered 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 and 24 may be modified by a second modification on the second strand. Nucleotides are numbered for the sake of the nucleic acid of the present invention from 5′ to 3′ on the first strand and 3′ to 5′ on the second strand.


The nucleotides numbered 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 and 24 may be modified by a modification on the first strand. The nucleotides numbered 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23 may be modified by a second modification on the first strand. The nucleotides numbered 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23 may be modified by a modification on the second strand. The nucleotides numbered 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 and 24 may be modified by a second modification on the second strand.


Clearly, if the first and/or the second strand are shorter than 25 nucleotides in length, such as 19 nucleotides in length, there are no nucleotides numbered 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25 to be modified. The skilled person understands the description above to apply to shorter strands, accordingly.


One or more modified nucleotides on the first strand may be paired with modified nucleotides on the second strand having a common modification. One or more modified nucleotides on the first strand may be paired with modified nucleotides on the second strand having a different modification. One or more modified nucleotides on the first strand may be paired with unmodified nucleotides on the second strand. One or more modified nucleotides on the second strand may be paired with unmodified nucleotides on the first strand. In other words, the alternating nucleotides can be aligned on the two strands such as, for example, all the modifications in the alternating regions of the second strand are paired with identical modifications in the first strand or alternatively the modifications can be offset by one nucleotide with the common modifications in the alternating regions of one strand pairing with dissimilar modifications (i.e., a second or further modification) in the other strand. Another option is to have dissimilar modifications in each of the strands.


The modifications on the first strand may be shifted by one nucleotide relative to the modified nucleotides on the second strand, such that common modified nucleotides are not paired with each other.


The modification and/or modifications may each and individually be selected from the group consisting of 3′ terminal deoxy thymine, 2′-OMe, a 2′ deoxy modification, a 2′ amino modification, a 2′ alkyl modification, a morpholino modification, a phosphoramidate modification, 5′-phosphorothioate group modification, a 5′ phosphate or 5′ phosphate mimic modification and a cholesteryl derivative or a dodecanoic acid bisdecylamide group modification and/or the modified nucleotide may be any one of a locked nucleotide, an abasic nucleotide or a non-natural base comprising nucleotide.


At least one modification may be 2′-OMe and/or at least one modification may be 2′-F. Further modifications as described herein may be present on the first and/or second strand.


The nucleic acid of the invention may comprise an inverted RNA nucleotide at one or several of the strand ends. Such inverted nucleotides provide stability to the nucleic acid. Preferably, the nucleic acid comprises at least an inverted nucleotide at the 3′ end of the first and/or the second strand and/or at the 5′ end of the second strand. More preferably, the nucleic acid comprises an inverted nucleotide at the 3′ end of the second strand. Most preferably, the nucleic acid comprises an inverted RNA nucleotide at the 3′ end of the second strand and this nucleotide is preferably an inverted A. An inverted nucleotide is a nucleotide that is linked to the 3′ end of a nucleic acid through its 3′ carbon, rather than its 5′ carbon as would normally be the case or is linked to the 5′ end of a nucleic acid through its 5′ carbon, rather than its 3′ carbon as would normally be the case. The inverted nucleotide is preferably present at an end of a strand not as an overhang but opposite a corresponding nucleotide in the other strand. Accordingly, the nucleic acid is preferably blunt-ended at the end that comprises the inverted RNA nucleotide. An inverted RNA nucleotide being present at the end of a strand preferably means that the last nucleotide at this end of the strand is the inverted RNA nucleotide. A nucleic acid with such a nucleotide is stable and easy to synthesise. The inverted RNA nucleotide is preferably an unmodified nucleotide in the sense that it does not comprise any modifications compared to the natural nucleotide counterpart. Specifically, the inverted RNA nucleotide is preferably a 2′-OH nucleotide.


Nucleic acids of the invention may comprise one or more nucleotides modified at the 2′ position with a 2′-H, and therefore having a DNA nucleotide within the nucleic acid. Nucleic acids of the invention may comprise DNA nucleotides at positions 2 and/or 14 of the first strand counting from the 5′ end of the first strand. Nucleic acids may comprise DNA nucleotides on the second strand which correspond to position 11, or 13, or 11 and 13, or 11-13 of the first strand.


In one aspect there is no more than one DNA nucleotide per nucleic acid of the invention.


Nucleic acids of the invention may comprise one or more LNA nucleotides. Nucleic acids of the invention may comprise LNA nucleotides at positions 2 and/or 14 of the first strand counting from the 5′ end of the first strand. Nucleic acids may comprise LNA on the second strand which correspond to position 11, or 13, or 11 and 13, or 11-13 of the first strand.


Some representative modified nucleic acid sequences of the present invention are shown in the examples. These examples are meant to be representative and not limiting.


In certain preferred embodiments, the nucleic acid may comprise a first modification and a second or further modification which are each and individually selected from the group comprising 2′-OMe modification and 2′-F modification. The nucleic acid may comprise a modification that is 2′-OMe that may be a first modification, and a second modification that is 2′-F. The nucleic acid of the invention may also include a phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate modification and/or a deoxy modification which may be present in or between the terminal 2 or 3 nucleotides of each or any end of each or both strands.


In one aspect of the nucleic acid, at least one nucleotide of the first and/or second strand is a modified nucleotide, wherein if the first strand comprises at least one modified nucleotide:

    • (i) at least one or both of the nucleotides 2 and 14 of the first strand is/are modified by a first modification; and/or
    • (ii) at least one, several, or all the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand is/are modified by a first modification; and/or
    • (iii) at least one, several, or all the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand is/are modified by a second modification; and/or wherein if the second strand comprises at least one modified nucleotide:
    • (iv) at least one, several, or all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an even-numbered nucleotide of the first strand is/are modified by a third modification; and/or
    • (v) at least one, several, or all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an odd-numbered nucleotide of the first strand is/are modified by a fourth modification; and/or
    • (vi) at least one, several, or all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to nucleotide 11 or nucleotide 13 or nucleotides 11 and 13 or nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand is/are modified by a fourth modification; and/or
    • (vii) at least one, several, or all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position other than the position corresponding to nucleotide 11 or nucleotide 13 or nucleotides 11 and 13 or nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand is/are modified by a third modification; wherein the nucleotides on the first strand are numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand;
    • wherein the modifications are preferably at least one of the following:
    • (a) the first modification is preferably different from the second and from the third modification;
    • (b) the first modification is preferably the same as the fourth modification;
    • (c) the second and the third modification are preferably the same modification;
    • (d) the first modification is preferably a 2′-F modification;
    • (e) the second modification is preferably a 2′-OMe modification;
    • (f) the third modification is preferably a 2′-OMe modification; and/or
    • (g) the fourth modification is preferably a 2′-F modification; and wherein optionally the nucleic acid is conjugated to a ligand.


One aspect is a double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of CFB, preferably in a cell, wherein the nucleic acid comprises a first strand and a second strand, wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 5a, or in Table 1, wherein all the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a first modification, all the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a second modification, all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an even-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified by a third modification, all the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an odd-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified by a fourth modification, wherein the first and fourth modification are 2′-F and the second and third modification are 2′-OMe.


One aspect is a double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of CFB, preferably in a cell, wherein the nucleic acid comprises a first strand and a second strand, wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 5a, or in Table 1, wherein all the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a first modification, all the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a second modification, all the nucleotides of the second strand in positions corresponding to nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand are modified by a fourth modification, all the nucleotides of the second strand other than the nucleotides corresponding to nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand are modified by a third modification, wherein the first and fourth modification are 2′-F and the second and third modification are 2′-OMe.


The 3′ and 5′ ends of an oligonucleotide can be modified. Such modifications can be at the 3′ end or the 5′ end or both ends of the molecule. They can include modification or replacement of an entire terminal phosphate or of one or more of the atoms of the phosphate group. For example, the 3′ and 5′ ends of an oligonucleotide can be conjugated to other functional molecular entities such as labelling moieties, e.g., fluorophores (e.g., pyrene, TAMRA, fluorescein, Cy3 or Cy5 dyes) or protecting groups (based e.g., on sulfur, silicon, boron or ester). The functional molecular entities can be attached to the sugar through a phosphate group and/or a linker. The terminal atom of the linker can connect to or replace the linking atom of the phosphate group or the C-3′ or C-5′ O, N, S or C group of the sugar. Alternatively, the linker can connect to or replace the terminal atom of a nucleotide surrogate (e.g., PNAs). These spacers or linkers can include e.g., —(CH2)n—, —(CH2)nN—, —(CH2)nO—, —(CH2)nS—, —(CH2CH2O)nCH2CH2O— (e.g., n=3 or 6), abasic sugars, amide, carboxy, amine, oxyamine, oxyimine, thioether, disulfide, thiourea, sulfonamide, or morpholino, or biotin and fluorescein reagents. The 3′ end can be an —OH group.


Other examples of terminal modifications include dyes, intercalating agents (e.g., acridines), cross-linkers (e.g., psoralene, mitomycin C), porphyrins (TPPC4, texaphyrin, Sapphyrin), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g., phenazine, dihydrophenazine), artificial endonucleases, EDTA, lipophilic carriers (e.g., cholesterol, cholic acid, adamantane acetic acid, 1-pyrene butyric acid, dihydrotestosterone, 1,3-Bis-O(hexadecyl)glycerol, geranyloxyhexyl group, hexadecylglycerol, borneol, menthol, 1,3-propanediol, heptadecyl group, palmitic acid, myristic acid, 03-(oleoyl)lithocholic acid, 03-(oleoyl)cholenic acid, dimethoxytrityl, or phenoxazine) and peptide conjugates (e.g., antennapedia peptide, Tat peptide), alkylating agents, phosphate, amino, mercapto, PEG (e.g., PEG-40K), MPEG, [MPEG]2, polyamino, alkyl, substituted alkyl, radiolabeled markers, enzymes, haptens (e.g., biotin), transport/absorption facilitators (e.g., aspirin, vitamin E, folic acid), synthetic ribonucleases (e.g., imidazole, bisimidazole, histamine, imidazole clusters, acridine-imidazole conjugates, Eu3+ complexes of tetraazamacrocycles).


Terminal modifications can also be useful for monitoring distribution, and in such cases the groups to be added may include fluorophores, e.g., fluorescein or an Alexa dye. Terminal modifications can also be useful for enhancing uptake, useful modifications for this include cholesterol. Terminal modifications can also be useful for cross-linking an RNA agent to another moiety.


Terminal modifications can be added for a number of reasons, including to modulate activity or to modulate resistance to degradation. Terminal modifications useful for modulating activity include modification of the 5′ end with phosphate or phosphate analogues. Nucleic acids of the invention, on the first or second strand, may be 5′ phosphorylated or include a phosphoryl analogue at the 5′ prime terminus. 5′-phosphate modifications include those which are compatible with RISC mediated gene silencing. Suitable modifications include: 5′-monophosphate ((HO)2(O)P—O-5′); 5′-diphosphate ((HO)2(O)P—O—P(HO)(O)—O-5′); 5′-triphosphate ((HO)2(O)P—O—(HO)(O)P—O—P(HO)(O)—O-5′); 5′-guanosine cap (7-methylated or non-methylated) (7m-G-O-5′-(HO)(O)P—O—(HO)(O)P—O—P(HO)(O)—O-5′); 5′-adenosine cap (Appp), and any modified or unmodified nucleotide cap structure (N—O-5′-(HO)(O)P—O—(HO)(O)P—O—P(HO)(O)—O-5′); 5′-monothiophosphate (phosphorothioate; (HO)2(S)P—O-5′); 5′-monodithiophosphate (phosphorodithioate; (HO)(HS)(S)P—O-5′), 5′-phosphorothiolate ((HO)2(O)P—S-5′); any additional combination of oxygen/sulfur replaced monophosphate, diphosphate and triphosphates (e.g., 5′-alpha-thiotriphosphate, 5′-gamma-thiotriphosphate, etc.), 5′-phosphoramidates ((HO)2(O)P—NH-5′, (HO)(NH2)(O)P—O-5′), 5′-alkylphosphonates (alkyl=methyl, ethyl, isopropyl, propyl, etc., e.g., RP(OH)(O)—O-5′-(wherein R is an alkyl), (OH)2(O)P-5′-CH2—), 5′ vinylphosphonate, 5′-alkyletherphosphonates (alkylether=methoxymethyl (MeOCH2—), ethoxymethyl, etc., e.g. RP(OH)(O)—O-5′- (wherein R is an alkylether)).


Certain moieties may be linked to the 5′ terminus of the first strand or the second strand. These include abasic ribose moiety, abasic deoxyribose moiety, modifications abasic ribose and abasic deoxyribose moieties including 2′-O alkyl modifications; inverted abasic ribose and abasic deoxyribose moieties and modifications thereof, C6-imino-Pi; a mirror nucleotide including L-DNA and L-RNA; 5′OMe nucleotide; and nucleotide analogues including 4′,5′-methylene nucleotide; 1-(R-D-erythrofuranosyl)nucleotide; 4′-thio nucleotide, carbocyclic nucleotide; 5′-amino-alkyl phosphate; 1,3-diamino-2-propyl phosphate, 3-aminopropyl phosphate; 6-aminohexyl phosphate; 12-aminododecyl phosphate; hydroxypropyl phosphate; 1,5-anhydrohexitol nucleotide; alpha-nucleotide; threo-pentofuranosyl nucleotide; acyclic 3′,4′-seco nucleotide; 3,4-dihydroxybutyl nucleotide; 3,5-dihydroxypentyl nucleotide, 5′-5′-inverted abasic moiety; 1,4-butanediol phosphate; 5′-amino; and bridging or non-bridging methylphosphonate and 5′-mercapto moieties.


In each sequence described herein, a C-terminal “—OH” moiety may be substituted for a C-terminal “—NH2” moiety, and vice-versa.


The invention also provides a nucleic acid according to any aspect of the invention described herein, wherein the first strand has a terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide at its 5′ end. This terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide is preferably linked to the second nucleotide in the first strand by a phosphodiester linkage. Preferably, the terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate (“vp”) nucleotide is an uridine (“vp-U”).


The first strand of the nucleic acid may comprise formula (I):





(vp)-N(po)[N(po)]n—  (I)


where ‘(vp)-’ is the 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate, ‘N’ is a nucleotide, ‘po’ is a phosphodiester linkage, and n is from 1 to (the total number of nucleotides in the first strand −2), preferably wherein n is from 1 to (the total number of nucleotides in the first strand −3), more preferably wherein n is from 1 to (the total number of nucleotides in the first strand −4).


Preferably, the terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide is an RNA nucleotide, preferably a (vp)-U.


A terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide is a nucleotide wherein the natural phosphate group at the 5′-end has been replaced with a E-vinylphosphonate, in which the bridging 5′-oxygen atom of the terminal nucleotide of the 5′ phosphorylated strand is replaced with a methynyl (—CH═) group:




embedded image


A 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate is a 5′ phosphate mimic. A biological mimic is a molecule that is capable of carrying out the same function as and is structurally very similar to the original molecule that is being mimicked. In the context of the present invention, 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate mimics the function of a normal 5′ phosphate, e.g., enabling efficient RISC loading. In addition, because of its slightly altered structure, 5′ (E) vinylphosphonate is capable of stabilizing the 5′-end nucleotide by protecting it from dephosphorylation by enzymes such as phosphatases.


In one aspect, the first strand has a terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide at its 5′ end, the terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide is linked to the second nucleotide in the first strand by a phosphodiester linkage and the first strand comprises a) more than 1 phosphodiester linkage; b) phosphodiester linkages between at least the terminal three 5′ nucleotides and/or c) phosphodiester linkages between at least the terminal four 5′ nucleotides.


In one aspect, the first strand and/or the second strand of the nucleic acid comprises at least one phosphorothioate (ps) and/or at least one phosphorodithioate (ps2) linkage between two nucleotides.


In one aspect, the first strand and/or the second strand of the nucleic acid comprises more than one phosphorothioate and/or more than one phosphorodithioate linkage.


In one aspect, the first strand and/or the second strand of the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate linkage between the terminal two 3′ nucleotides or phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate linkages between the terminal three 3′ nucleotides. Preferably, the linkages between the other nucleotides in the first strand and/or the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.


In one aspect, the first strand and/or the second strand of the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal two 5′ nucleotides or a phosphorothioate linkages between the terminal three 5′ nucleotides.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid of the present invention comprises one or more phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate modifications on one or more of the terminal ends of the first and/or the second strand. Optionally, each or either end of the first strand may comprise one or two or three phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate modified nucleotides (internucleoside linkage). Optionally, each or either end of the second strand may comprise one or two or three phosphorothioate or phosphorodithioate modified nucleotides (internucleoside linkage).


In one aspect, the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal two or three 3′ nucleotides and/or 5′ nucleotides of the first and/or the second strand. Preferably, the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate linkage between each of the terminal three 3′ nucleotides and the terminal three 5′ nucleotides of the first strand and of the second strand. Preferably, all remaining linkages between nucleotides of the first and/or of the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorodithioate linkage between each of the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the first strand and/or comprises a phosphorodithioate linkage between each of the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the second strand and/or a phosphorodithioate linkage between each of the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 5′ end of the second strand and comprises a linkage other than a phosphorodithioate linkage between the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 5′ end of the first strand.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal three 3′ nucleotides and the terminal three 5′ nucleotides of the first strand and of the second strand. Preferably, all remaining linkages between nucleotides of the first and/or of the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid:

    • (i) has a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal three 3′ nucleotides and the terminal three 5′ nucleotides of the first strand;
    • (ii) is conjugated to a triantennary ligand either on the 3′ end nucleotide or on the 5′ end nucleotide of the second strand;
    • (iii) has a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal three nucleotides of the second strand at the end opposite to the one conjugated to the triantennary ligand; and
    • (iv) optionally all remaining linkages between nucleotides of the first and/or of the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid:

    • (i) has a terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide at the 5′ end of the first strand;
    • (ii) has a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal three 3′ nucleotides on the first and second strand and between the terminal three 5′ nucleotides on the second strand or it has a phosphorodithioate linkage between the terminal two 3′ nucleotides on the first and second strand and between the terminal two 5′ nucleotides on the second strand; and
    • (iii) optionally all remaining linkages between nucleotides of the first and/or of the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid has a terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide at the 5′ end of the first strand and has a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal three 3′ nucleotides on the first and between the terminal three 3′nucleotides on the second strand; and optionally all remaining linkages between nucleotides of the first and/or of the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.


The use of a phosphorodithioate linkage in the nucleic acid of the invention reduces the variation in the stereochemistry of a population of nucleic acid molecules compared to molecules comprising a phosphorothioate in that same position. Phosphorothioate linkages introduce chiral centres and it is difficult to control which non-linking oxygen is substituted for sulphur. The use of a phosphorodithioate ensures that no chiral centre exists in that linkage and thus reduces or eliminates any variation in the population of nucleic acid molecules, depending on the number of phosphorodithioate and phosphorothioate linkages used in the nucleic acid molecule.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorodithioate linkage between the two terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the first strand and a phosphorodithioate linkage between the two terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the second strand and a phosphorodithioate linkage between the two terminal nucleotides at the 5′ end of the second strand and comprises a linkage other than a phosphorodithioate linkage between the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 5′ end of the first strand. Preferably, the first strand has a terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide at its 5′ end. This terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide is preferably linked to the second nucleotide in the first strand by a phosphodiester linkage. Preferably, all the linkages between the nucleotides of both strands other than the linkage between the two terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the first strand and the linkages between the two terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end and at the 5′ end of the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate linkage between each of the three terminal 3′ nucleotides and/or between each of the three terminal 5′ nucleotides on the first strand, and/or between each of the three terminal 3′ nucleotides and/or between each of the three terminal 5′ nucleotides of the second strand when there is no phosphorodithioate linkage present at that end. No phosphorodithioate linkage being present at an end means that the linkage between the two terminal nucleotides, or preferably between the three terminal nucleotides of the nucleic acid end in question are linkages other than phosphorodithioate linkages.


In one aspect, all the linkages of the nucleic acid between the nucleotides of both strands other than the linkage between the two terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the first strand and the linkages between the two terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end and at the 5′ end of the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.


Other phosphate linkage modifications are possible.


The phosphate linker can also be modified by replacement of a linking oxygen with nitrogen (bridged phosphoroamidates), sulfur (bridged phosphorothioates) and carbon (bridged methylenephosphonates). The replacement can occur at a terminal oxygen. Replacement of the non-linking oxygens with nitrogen is possible.


The phosphate groups can also individually be replaced by non-phosphorus containing connectors.


Examples of moieties which can replace the phosphate group include siloxane, carbonate, carboxymethyl, carbamate, amide, thioether, ethylene oxide linker, sulfonate, sulfonamide, thioformacetal, formacetal, oxime, methyleneimino, methylenemethylimino, methylenehydrazo, methylenedimethylhydrazo and methyleneoxymethylimino. In certain embodiments, replacements may include the methylenecarbonylamino and methylenemethylimino groups.


The phosphate linker and ribose sugar may be replaced by nuclease resistant nucleotides. Examples include the morpholino, cyclobutyl, pyrrolidine and peptide nucleic acid (PNA) nucleoside surrogates. In certain embodiments, PNA surrogates may be used.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid, which is preferably an siRNA that inhibits expression of CFB, preferably via RNAi, and preferably in a cell, comprises one or more or all of:

    • (i) a modified nucleotide;
    • (ii) a modified nucleotide other than a 2′-OMe modified nucleotide at positions 2 and 14 from the 5′ end of the first strand, preferably a 2′-F modified nucleotide;
    • (iii) each of the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand as numbered starting from one at the 5′ end of the first strand are 2′-OMe modified nucleotides;
    • (iv) each of the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand as numbered starting from one at the 5′ end of the first strand are 2′-F modified nucleotides;
    • (v) the second strand nucleotide corresponding to position 11 and/or 13 or 11-13 of the first strand is modified by a modification other than a 2′-OMe modification, preferably wherein one or both or all of these positions comprise a 2′-F modification;
    • (vi) an inverted nucleotide, preferably a 3′-3′ linkage at the 3′ end of the second strand;
    • (vii) one or more phosphorothioate linkages;
    • (viii) one or more phosphorodithioate linkages; and/or
    • (ix) the first strand has a terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide at its 5′ end, in which case the terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide is preferably a uridine and is preferably linked to the second nucleotide in the first strand by a phosphodiester linkage.


A nucleic acid of the present disclosure may comprise a first strand and a second strand, wherein the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 5b.


A nucleic acid of the present disclosure may be a nucleic acid wherein:

    • (a) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (b) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (c) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (d) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (e) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (f) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (g) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (h) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (i) the first strand sequence consists of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (j) the first strand sequence consists essentially of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists essentially of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5b; or
    • (k) the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5b, wherein said first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5b;
    • (l) the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5b, wherein said first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5b, and wherein said first strand sequence consists of a contiguous region of from 17-25 nucleotides in length, preferably of from 18-24 nucleotides in length, complementary to the CFB transcript of SEQ ID NO. 758, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 5b;
    • (m) the first strand and the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are present on a single strand wherein the first strand and the second strand are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length; or
    • (n) the first strand and the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are on two separate strands that are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length.


A nucleic acid of the present disclosure may comprise a first strand and a second strand, wherein the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 2.


For example, a nucleic acid of the present disclosure may be a nucleic acid wherein:

    • (a) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (b) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (c) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (d) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (e) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (f) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (g) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (h) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (i) the first strand sequence consists of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (j) the first strand sequence consists essentially of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists essentially of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2; or
    • (k) the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2,
      • wherein said first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2, and
      • optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2;
    • (l) the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2,
      • wherein said first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2, and
      • wherein said first strand sequence consists of a contiguous region of from 17-25 nucleotides in length, preferably of from 18-24 nucleotides in length, complementary to the CFB transcript of SEQ ID NO. 758, and
      • optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2;
    • (m) the first strand and the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are present on a single strand wherein the first strand and the second strand are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length; or
    • (n) the first strand and the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (1) above are on two separate strands that are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length.












TABLE 2







First
Second



strand sequence
strand sequence



(SEQ ID No.)
(SEQ ID No.)









417
725



431
726



655
728



561
729



407
730



679
733



609
739



740
730



741
728



742
729



746
726



750
725



740
759



742
760










All the features of the nucleic acids can be combined with all other aspects of the invention disclosed herein.


Heterologous Moieties

The nucleic acids of the invention may be conjugated to a heterologous moiety. A heterologous moiety is any moiety which is not a nucleic acid molecule capable of inhibiting expression of CFB. A heterologous moiety may be, or may comprise, a peptide (or polypeptide), a saccharide (or polysaccharide), a lipid, a different nucleic acid, or any other suitable molecule.


Any given nucleic acid may be conjugated to a plurality of heterologous moieties, which may be the same or different.


An individual heterologous moiety may itself comprise one or more functional moieties (such as targeting agents as described in more detail below), each optionally covalently associated to the nucleic acid via a linker.


A heterologous moiety, or the functional component thereof, may serve for example to modulate bioavailability or pharmacokinetics. For example, it may increase half life in vivo.


Alternatively, a heterologous moiety (or the functional component thereof) may comprise a targeting agent. Efficient delivery of oligonucleotides, in particular double-stranded nucleic acids of the invention, to cells in vivo is important and requires specific targeting and substantial protection from the extracellular environment, particularly serum proteins. One method of achieving specific targeting is to conjugate a targeting agent to the nucleic acid, wherein the targeting agent helps in targeting the nucleic acid to a target cell which has a cell surface receptor that binds to the targeting agent.


In this context, the term “receptor” is used to include any molecule on the surface of a target cell capable of binding to the targeting agent, and should not be taken to imply any particular function for the cell surface receptor. The targeting agent may be regarded as a “ligand” for the cell surface receptor. The terms “targeting agent” and “ligand” may be used interchangeably. Again, this terminology should not be taken to imply any particular function for the targeting agent or the cell surface receptor, or any particular relationship between the two molecules other than the ability of one to bind to the other.


Thus, the targeting agent may be any moiety having affinity for the chosen receptor. It may, for example, be an affinity protein (such as an antibody or a fragment thereof having affinity for the chosen receptor), an aptamer, or any other suitable moiety. In some embodiments, the targeting agent may be a physiological ligand for the receptor.


Binding between the targeting agent and the receptor may promote uptake of the conjugated nucleic acid by the target cell, e.g., via internalisation of the receptor, or any other suitable mechanism. Thus appropriate ligands for the desired receptor molecules may be used as targeting agents in order for the conjugated nucleic acids to be taken up by the target cells by mechanisms such as different receptor-mediated endocytosis pathways or functionally analogous processes. In other embodiments, a ligand which can mediate internalization of the nucleic acid into a target cell by mechanisms other than receptor mediated endocytosis may alternatively be conjugated to a nucleic acid of the invention for cell or tissue specific targeting.


One example of a ligand that mediates receptor mediated endocytosis is the GalNAc moiety described herein, which has high affinity to the asialoglycoprotein receptor complex (ASGP-R). The ASGP-R complex is composed of varying ratios of multimers of membrane ASGR1 and ASGR2 receptors, which are highly abundant on hepatocytes. One of the first disclosures of the use of triantennary cluster glycosides as conjugated ligands was in U.S. Pat. No. 5,885,968. Conjugates having three GalNAc ligands and comprising phosphate groups are known and are described in Dubber et al. (Bioconjug. Chem. 2003 Jan.-Feb. 14(1):239-46.). The ASGP-R complex shows a 50-fold higher affinity for N-Acetyl-D-Galactosamine (GalNAc) than D-Gal.


The ASGP-R complex recognizes specifically terminal 3-galactosyl subunits of glycosylated proteins or other oligosaccharides (Weigel, P. H. et. al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta. 2002 Sep. 19; 1572(2-3):341-63) and can be used for delivering a drug to the liver's hepatocytes expressing the receptor complex by covalent coupling of galactose or galactosamine to the drug substance (Ishibashi, S.; et. al., J Biol. Chem. 1994 Nov. 11; 269(45):27803-6). Furthermore, the binding affinity can be significantly increased by the multi-valency effect, which is achieved by the repetition of the targeting moiety (Biessen E A, et al., J Med Chem. 1995 Apr. 28; 38(9):1538-46).


The ASGP-R complex is a mediator for an active uptake of terminal β-galactosyl containing glycoproteins to the cell's endosomes. Thus, the ASGPR is highly suitable for targeted delivery of drug candidates conjugated to such ligands like, e.g., nucleic acids into receptor-expressing cells (Akinc et al., Mol Ther. 2010 Jul. 18(7):1357-64).


More generally the ligand can comprise a saccharide that is selected to have an affinity for at least one type of receptor on a target cell. In particular, the receptor is on the surface of a mammalian liver cell, for example, the hepatic asialoglycoprotein receptor complex described before (ASGP-R).


The saccharide may be selected from N-acetyl galactosamine, mannose, galactose, glucose, glucosamine and fucose. The saccharide may be N-acetyl galactosamine (GalNAc). The heterologous moiety may comprise a plurality of such saccharides, e.g., two or especially three such saccharides, e.g., three GalNAc groups.


A heterologous moiety may therefore comprise (i) one or more functional components, and (ii) a linker, wherein the linker conjugates the functional components to a nucleic acid as defined in any preceding aspects. The linker may be a monovalent structure or bivalent or trivalent or tetravalent branched structure. The nucleotides may be modified as defined herein.


The functional components may therefore be ligands (or targeting agents). Where multiple functional components are present, they may be the same or different. Where the functional components are ligands, they may be saccharides, and may therefore be (or comprise) GalNAc.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid is conjugated to a heterologous moiety comprising a compound of formula (II):





[S—X1—P—X2]3-A-X3—  (II)


wherein:

    • S represents a functional component, e.g., a ligand, such as a saccharide, preferably wherein the saccharide is N-acetyl galactosamine;
    • X1 represents C3-C6 alkylene or (—CH2—CH2—O)m(—CH2)2— wherein m is 1, 2, or 3;
    • P is a phosphate or modified phosphate, preferably a thiophosphate;
    • X2 is alkylene or an alkylene ether of the formula (—CH2)n—O—CH2— where n=1-6;
    • A is a branching unit;
    • X3 represents a bridging unit;
    • wherein a nucleic acid according to the present invention is conjugated to X3 via a phosphate or modified phosphate, preferably a thiophosphate.


In formula (II), the branching unit “A” preferably branches into three in order to accommodate three saccharide ligands. The branching unit is preferably covalently attached to the remaining tethered portions of the ligand and the nucleic acid. The branching unit may comprise a branched aliphatic group comprising groups selected from alkyl, amide, disulphide, polyethylene glycol, ether, thioether and hydroxyamino groups. The branching unit may comprise groups selected from alkyl and ether groups.


The branching unit A may have a structure selected from:




embedded image


wherein each A1 independently represents O, S, C═O or NH; and each n independently represents an integer from 1 to 20.


The branching unit may have a structure selected from:




embedded image


wherein each A1 independently represents O, S, C═O or NH; and each n independently represents an integer from 1 to 20.


The branching unit may have a structure selected from:




embedded image


wherein A1 is O, S, C═O or NH; and each n independently represents an integer from 1 to 20.


The branching unit may have the structure:




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The branching unit may have the structure:




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The branching unit may have the structure:




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Alternatively, the branching unit A may have a structure selected from:




embedded image


wherein:

    • R1 is hydrogen or C1-C10 alkylene;
    • and R2 is C1-C10 alkylene.


Optionally, the branching unit consists of only a carbon atom.


The “X3” portion is a bridging unit. The bridging unit is linear and is covalently bound to the branching unit and the nucleic acid.


X3 may be selected from —C1-C20 alkylene-, —C2-C20 alkenylene-, an alkylene ether of formula —(C1-C20 alkylene)-O—(C1-C20 alkylene)-, —C(O)—C1-C20 alkylene-, —C0-C4 alkylene(Cy)C0-C4 alkylene- wherein Cy represents a substituted or unsubstituted 5 or 6 membered cycloalkylene, arylene, heterocyclylene or heteroarylene ring, —C1-C4 alkylene-NHC(O)—C1-C4 alkylene-, —C1-C4 alkylene-C(O)NH—C1-C4 alkylene-, —C1-C4 alkylene-SC(O)—C1-C4 alkylene-, —C1-C4 alkylene-C(O)S—C1-C4 alkylene-, —C1-C4 alkylene-OC(O)—C1-C4 alkylene-, —C1-C4 alkylene-C(O)O—C1-C4 alkylene-, and —C1-C6 alkylene-S—S—C1-C6 alkylene-.


X3 may be an alkylene ether of formula —(C1-C20 alkylene)-O—(C1-C20 alkylene)-. X3 may be an alkylene ether of formula —(C1-C20 alkylene)-O—(C4-C20 alkylene)-, wherein said (C4-C20 alkylene) is linked to Z. X3 may be selected from the group consisting of —CH2—O—C3H6—, —CH2—O—C4H8—, —CH2—O—C6H12— and —CH2—O—C8H16—, especially —CH2—O—C4H8—, —CH2—O—C6H12— and —CH2—O—C8H16, wherein in each case the —CH2— group is linked to A.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid is conjugated to a heterologous moiety of formula (III):





[S—X1—P—X2]3-A-X3—  (Iii)


wherein:

    • S represents a functional component, e.g., a ligand, such as a saccharide, preferably GalNAc;
    • X1 represents C3-C6 alkylene or (—CH2—CH2—O)m(—CH2)2— wherein m is 1, 2, or 3;
    • P is a phosphate or modified phosphate, preferably a thiophosphate;
    • X2 is C1-C8 alkylene;
    • A is a branching unit selected from:




embedded image




    • X3 is a bridging unit;

    • wherein a nucleic acid according to the present invention is conjugated to X3 via a phosphate or a modified phosphate, preferably a thiophosphate.





The branching unit A may have the structure:




embedded image


The branching unit A may have the structure:




embedded image


wherein X3 is attached to the nitrogen atom.


X3 may be C1-C20 alkylene. Preferably, X3 is selected from the group consisting of —C3H6—, —C4H8—, —C6H12— and —C8H16—, especially —C4H8—, —C6H12— and —C3H16—.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid is conjugated to a ligand comprising a compound of formula (IV):





[S—X1—P—X2]3-A-X3—  (IV)


wherein:

    • S represents a functional component, e.g., a ligand, such as a saccharide, preferably GalNAc;
    • X1 represents C3-C6 alkylene or (—CH2—CH2—O)m(—CH2)2— wherein m is 1, 2, or 3;
    • P is a phosphate or modified phosphate, preferably a thiophosphate;
    • X2 is an alkylene ether of formula —C3H6—O—CH2—;
    • A is a branching unit;
    • X3 is an alkylene ether of formula selected from the group consisting of —CH2—O—CH2—, —CH2—O—C2H4—, —CH2—O—C3H6—, —CH2—O—C4H8—, —CH2—O—C5H10—, —CH2—O—C6H12—, —CH2—O—C7H14—, and —CH2—O—C3H16—, wherein in each case the —CH2— group is linked to A, and wherein X3 is conjugated to a nucleic acid according to the present invention by a phosphate or modified phosphate, preferably a thiophosphate.


The branching unit may comprise carbon. Preferably, the branching unit is a carbon.


X3 may be selected from the group consisting of —CH2—O—C4H8—, —CH2—O—C5H10—, —CH2—O—C6H12—, —CH2—O—C7H14—, and —CH2—O—C3H16—. Preferably, X3 is selected from the group consisting of —CH2—O—C4H8—, —CH2—O—C6H12— and —CH2—O—C3H16.


X1 may be (—CH2—CH2—O)(—CH2)2—. X1 may be (—CH2—CH2—O)2(—CH2)2—. X1 may be (—CH2—CH2—O)3(—CH2)2—. Preferably, X1 is (—CH2—CH2—O)2(—CH2)2—. Alternatively, X1 represents C3-C6 alkylene. X1 may be propylene. X1 may be butylene. X1 may be pentylene. X1 may be hexylene.


Preferably the alkyl is a linear alkylene. In particular, X1 may be butylene.


X2 represents an alkylene ether of formula —C3H6—O—CH2— i.e., C3 alkoxy methylene, or —CH2CH2CH2OCH2—.


For any of the above aspects, when P represents a modified phosphate group, P can be represented by:




embedded image


wherein Y1 and Y2 each independently represent ═O, ═S, —O—, —OH, —SH, —BH3, —OCH2CO2, —OCH2CO2Rx, —OCH2C(S)ORx, and —ORx, wherein Rx represents C1-C6 alkyl and wherein




embedded image


indicates attachment to the remainder of the compound. By modified phosphate it is meant a phosphate group wherein one or more of the non-linking oxygens is replaced. Examples of modified phosphate groups include phosphorothioate, phosphorodithioates, phosphoroselenates, borano phosphates, borano phosphate esters, hydrogen phosphonates, phosphoroamidates, alkyl or aryl phosphonates and phosphotriesters. Phosphorodithioates have both non-linking oxygens replaced by sulphur. One, each or both non-linking oxygens in the phosphate group can be independently any one of S, Se, B, C, H, N, or OR (R is alkyl or aryl).


The phosphate can also be modified by replacement of a linking oxygen with nitrogen (bridged phosphoroamidates), sulfur (bridged phosphorothioates) and carbon (bridged methylenephosphonates). The replacement can occur at a terminal oxygen. Replacement of the non-linking oxygens with nitrogen is possible.


For example, Y1 may represent —OH and Y2 may represent ═O or ═S; or

    • Y1 may represent —O— and Y2 may represent ═O or ═S;
    • Y1 may represent ═O and Y2 may represent —CH3, —SH, —ORx, or —BH3
    • Y1 may represent ═S and Y2 may represent —CH3, ORx or —SH.


It will be understood by the skilled person that in certain instances there will be delocalization between Y1 and Y2.


Preferably, the modified phosphate group is a thiophosphate group. Thiophosphate groups include bithiophosphate (i.e., where Y1 represents ═S and Y2 represents —S—) and monothiophosphate (i.e., where Y1 represents —O— and Y2 represents ═S, or where Y1 represents ═O and Y2 represents —S). Preferably, P is a monothiophosphate. The inventors have found that conjugates having thiophosphate groups in replacement of phosphate groups have improved potency and duration of action in vivo.


P may also be an ethylphosphate (i.e., where Y1 represents ═O and Y2 represents OCH2CH3).


The ligand, e.g., saccharide, may be selected to have an affinity for at least one type of receptor on a target cell. In particular, the receptor is on the surface of a mammalian liver cell, for example, the hepatic asialoglycoprotein receptor complex (ASGP-R).


For any of the above or below aspects, the saccharide may be selected from N-acetyl with one or more of galactosamine, mannose, galactose, glucose, glucosamine and fructose. Typically a ligand to be used in the present invention may include N-acetyl galactosamine (GalNAc). Preferably the compounds of the invention may have 3 ligands, which will each preferably include N-acetyl galactosamine.


“GalNAc” refers to 2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-D-galactopyranose, commonly referred to in the literature as N-acetyl galactosamine. Reference to “GalNAc” or “N-acetyl galactosamine” includes both the β-form: 2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-β-D-galactopyranose and the α-form: 2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-α-D-galactopyranose. In certain embodiments, both the β-form: 2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-β-D-galactopyranose and α-form: 2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-α-D-galactopyranose may be used interchangeably. Preferably, the compounds of the invention comprise the β-form, 2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-β-D-galactopyranose.




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2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-D-galactopyranose




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2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-β-D-galactopyranose




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2-(Acetylamino)-2-deoxy-α-D-galactopyranose


In one aspect, the nucleic acid is a conjugated nucleic acid, wherein the nucleic acid is conjugated to a heterologous moiety with one of the following structures, which may be referred to as “triantennary ligands” for ease of reference:




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wherein Z is any nucleic acid as defined herein. In certain embodiments, the heterologous moiety (“triantennary ligand”) is conjugated to the 5′ end of the second (sense) strand of Z (which is also referred to as strand “B” in Tables 5a, 5b, 5c).


In certain embodiments, the nucleic acid Z is conjugated to the triantennary ligand via the phosphate or thiophosphate group which links the triantennary ligand to the 3′ or 5′ position of the sugar, particularly to the 3′ or 5′ position of the ribose, of the terminal nucleotide of said nucleic acid Z.


In certain embodiments, the heterologous moiety (“triantennary ligand”) is conjugated to the 3′ position of the ribose of the terminal nucleotide of the second (sense) strand of Z (which is also referred to as strand “B” in Tables 5a. 5b. 5c).


In other embodiments, the heterologous moiety (“triantennary ligand”) is conjugated to the 5′ position of the ribose of the terminal nucleotide of the second (sense) strand of Z (which is also referred to as strand “B” in Tables 5a, 5b, 5c).


In other embodiments, the heterologous moiety (“triantennary ligand”) is conjugated to the 3′ position of the ribose of the terminal nucleotide of the first (antisense) strand of Z (which is also referred to as strand “A” in Tables 5a, 5b, 5c).


Preferably, the nucleic acid is a conjugated nucleic acid, wherein the nucleic acid is conjugated to a triantennary ligand with one of the following structures:




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wherein Z is any nucleic acid as defined herein. Preferably, the heterologous moiety (“triantennary ligand”) is conjugated to the 5′ end of the second (sense) strand of Z (which is also referred to as strand “B” in Tables 5a, 5b, 5c).


In a preferred embodiment, the nucleic acid Z is conjugated to the triantennary ligand via the phosphate or thiophosphate group which links the triantennary ligand to the 3′ or 5′ position of the ribose of the terminal nucleotide of said nucleic acid Z.


Preferably, the triantennary ligand” is conjugated to the 5′ position of the ribose of the terminal nucleotide of the second (sense) strand of Z (which is also referred to as strand “B” in Tables 5a, 5b, 5c).


A heterologous moiety of formula (II), (Ill) or (IV) or any one of the triantennary ligands disclosed herein can be attached at the 3′-end of the first (antisense) strand and/or at any of the 3′ and/or 5′ end of the second (sense) strand. The nucleic acid can comprise more than one heterologous moiety of formula (II), (Ill) or (IV) or any one of the triantennary ligands disclosed herein. However, a single heterologous moiety of formula (II), (Ill) or (IV) or any one of the triantennary ligands disclosed herein is preferred because a single such moiety is sufficient for efficient targeting of the nucleic acid to the target cells. Preferably in that case, at least the last two, preferably at least the last three and more preferably at least the last four nucleotides at the end of the nucleic acid to which the ligand is attached are linked by a phosphodiester linkage.


Preferably, the 5′-end of the first (antisense) strand is not attached to a heterologous moiety, since attachment at this position can potentially interfere with the biological activity of the nucleic acid.


A nucleic acid with a single heterologous moiety (e.g., of formula (II), (Ill) or (IV) or any one of the triantennary ligands disclosed herein) at the 5′ end of a strand is easier and therefore cheaper to synthesise than the same nucleic acid with the same group at the 3′ end. Preferably therefore, a single heterologous moiety (e.g., of any of formulae (II), (Ill) or (IV) or any one of the triantennary ligands disclosed herein) is covalently attached to (conjugated with) the 5′ end of the second strand of the nucleic acid.


In one aspect, the first strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (V):




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    • wherein b is preferably 0 or 1; and the second strand is a compound of formula (VI):







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    • wherein:
      • c and d are independently preferably 0 or 1;
      • Z1 and Z2 are respectively the first and second strand of the nucleic acid;
      • Y is independently O or S;
      • n is independently 0, 1, 2 or 3; and
      • L1 is a linker to which a ligand is attached, wherein L1 is the same or different in formulae (V) and (VI), and is the same or different within formulae (V) and (VI) when L1 is present more than once within the same formula, wherein L1 is preferably of formula (VII);

    • and wherein b+c+d is preferably 2 or 3.





Preferably, L1 in formulae (V) and (VI) is of formula (VII):




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wherein:

    • L is selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of:
      • —(CH2)r—C(O)—, wherein r=2-12;
      • —(CH2—CH2—O)S—CH2—C(O)—, wherein s=1-5;
      • —(CH2)t—CO—NH—(CH2)t—NH—C(O)—, wherein t is independently 1-5;
      • —(CH2)u—CO—NH—(CH2), —C(O)—, wherein u is independently 1-5; and
      • —(CH2)v—NH—C(O)—, wherein v is 2-12; and
    • wherein the terminal C(O), if present, is attached to X of formula (VII), or if X is absent, to W1 of formula (VII), or if W1 is absent, to V of formula (VII); W1, W3 and W5 are individually absent or selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of:
      • —(CH2)r, wherein r=1-7;
      • —(CH2)s-O—(CH2)s—, wherein s is independently 0-5;
      • —(CH2)t—S—(CH2)r, wherein t is independently 0-5;
    • X is absent or is selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of: NH, NCH3 or NC2H5;
    • V is selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of:
    • CH, N




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    • wherein B, if present, is a modified or natural nucleobase.





In one aspect, the first strand is a compound of formula (VIII)




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    • wherein b is preferably 0 or 1; and

    • the second strand is a compound of formula (IX):







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    • wherein c and d are independently preferably 0 or 1;

    • wherein:
      • Z1 and Z2 are respectively the first and second strand of the nucleic acid;
      • Y is independently O or S;
      • R1 is H or methyl;
      • n is independently preferably 0, 1, 2 or 3; and
      • L is the same or different in formulae (VIII) and (IX), and is the same or different within formulae (VIII) and (IX) when L is present more than once within the same formula, and is selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of:
        • —(CH2)r˜C(O)—, wherein r=2-12;
        • —(CH2—CH2—O)S—CH2˜C(O)—, wherein s=1-5;
        • —(CH2)t—CO—NH—(CH2)t—NH—C(O)—, wherein t is independently 1-5;
        • —(CH2)u—CO—NH—(CH2)u˜C(O)—, wherein u is independently 1-5; and
        • —(CH2)v—NH—C(O)—, wherein v is 2-12; and
      • wherein the terminal C(O), if present, is attached to the NH group (of the linker, not of the targeting ligand);

    • and wherein b+c+d is preferably 2 or 3.





In one aspect, the first strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (X):




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    • wherein b is preferably 0 or 1; and

    • the second strand is a compound of formula (XI):







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    • wherein:
      • c and d are independently preferably 0 or 1;
      • Z1 and Z2 are respectively the first and second RNA strand of the nucleic;
      • Y is independently O or S;
      • n is independently preferably 0, 1, 2 or 3; and
      • L2 is the same or different in formulae (X) and (XI) and is the same or different in moieties bracketed by b, c and d, and is selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of:







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or

    • n is 0 and L2 is:




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    • and the terminal OH group is absent such that the following moiety is formed:







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    • wherein:

    • F is a saturated branched or unbranched (such as unbranched) C1-8alkyl (e.g., C1-6alkyl) chain wherein one of the carbon atoms is optionally replaced with an oxygen atom provided that said oxygen atom is separated from another heteroatom (e.g., an O or N atom) by at least 2 carbon atoms;

    • L is the same or different in formulae (X) and (XI) and is selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of:
      • —(CH2)r—C(O)—, wherein r=2-12;
      • —(CH2—CH2—O)S—CH2˜C(O)—, wherein s=1-5;
      • —(CH2)t—CO—NH—(CH2)t—NH—C(O)—, wherein t is independently 1-5;
      • —(CH2)u—CO—NH—(CH2)u—C(O)—, wherein u is independently 1-5; and
      • —(CH2)—NH—C(O)—, wherein v is 2-12; and

    • wherein the terminal C(O), if present, is attached to the NH group (of the linker, not of the targeting ligand);

    • and wherein b+c+d is preferably 2 or 3.





In one aspect, b is 0, c is 1 and d is 1; b is 1, c is 0 and d is 1; b is 1, c is 1 and d is 0; or b is 1, c is 1 and d is 1 in any of the nucleic acids of formulae (V) and (VI) or (VIII) and (IX) or (X) and (X). Preferably, b is 0, c is 1 and d is 1; b is 1, c is 0 and d is 1; or b is 1, c is 1 and d is 1. Most preferably, b is 0, c is 1 and d is 1.


In one aspect, Y is O in any of the nucleic acids of formulae (V) and (VI) or (VIII) and (IX) or (X) and (X). In another aspect, Y is S. In a preferred aspect, Y is independently selected from O or S in the different positions in the formulae.


In one aspect, R1 is H or methyl in any of the nucleic acids of formulae (VIII) and (IX). In one aspect, R1 is H. In another aspect, R1 is methyl.


In one aspect, n is 0, 1, 2 or 3 in any of the nucleic acids of formulae (V) and (VI) or (VIII) and (IX) or (X) and (XI). Preferably, n is 0.


Examples of F moieties in any of the nucleic acids of formulae (X) and (XI) include (CH2)1-6 e.g., (CH2)1-4 e.g. CH2, (CH2)4, (CH2)5 or (CH2)6, or CH2O(CH2)2-3, e.g., CH2O(CH2)CH3.


In one aspect, L2 in formulae (X) and (XI) is:




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In one aspect, L2 is:




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In one aspect, L2 is:




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In one aspect, L2 is:




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In one aspect, n is 0 and L2 is:




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and the terminal OH group is absent such that the following moiety is formed:




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wherein Y is O or S.


In one aspect, L in the nucleic acids of formulae (V) and (VI) or (VIII) and (IX) or (X) and (XI), is selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of:

    • —(CH2)r—C(O)—, wherein r=2-12;
    • —(CH2—CH2—O)s—CH2˜C(O)—, wherein s=1-5;
    • —(CH2)t—CO—NH—(CH2)t—NH—C(O)—, wherein t is independently 1-5;
    • —(CH2)u—CO—NH—(CH2)u—C(O)—, wherein u is independently 1-5; and
    • —(CH2)—NH—C(O)—, wherein v is 2-12;
    • wherein the terminal C(O) is attached to the NH group.


Preferably, L is —(CH2)r˜C(O)—, wherein r=2-12, more preferably r=2-6 even more preferably, r=4 or 6 e.g., 4.


Preferably, L is:




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Within the moiety bracketed by b, c and d, L2 in the nucleic acids of formulae (X) and (XI) is typically the same. Between moieties bracketed by b, c and d, L2 may be the same or different. In an embodiment, L2 in the moiety bracketed by c is the same as the L2 in the moiety bracketed by d. In an embodiment, L2 in the moiety bracketed by c is not the same as L2 in the moiety bracketed by d. In an embodiment, the L2 in the moieties bracketed by b, c and d is the same, for example when the linker moiety is a serinol-derived linker moiety.


Serinol derived linker moieties may be based on serinol in any stereochemistry i.e., derived from L-serine isomer, D-serine isomer, a racemic serine or other combination of isomers. In a preferred aspect of the invention, the serinol-GalNAc moiety (SerGN) has the following stereochemistry:




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i.e., is based on an (S)-serinol-amidite or (S)-serinol succinate solid supported building block derived from L-serine isomer.


In a preferred aspect, the first strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (VIII) and the second strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (IX), wherein:

    • b is 0;
    • c and d are 1,
    • n is 0,
    • Z1 and Z2 are respectively the first and second strand of the nucleic acid,
    • Y is S,
    • R1 is H, and
    • L is —(CH2)4˜C(O)—, wherein the terminal C(O) of L is attached to the N atom of the linker (i.e. not a possible N atom of a targeting ligand).


In another preferred aspect, the first strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (V) and the second strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (VI), wherein:

    • b is 0,
    • c and d are 1,
    • n is 0,
    • Z1 and Z2 are respectively the first and second strand of the nucleic acid,
    • Y is S,
    • L1 is of formula (VII), wherein:
      • W1 is —CH2—O—(CH2)3—,
      • W3 is —CH2—,
      • W5 is absent,
      • V is CH,
      • X is NH, and
      • L is —(CH2)4˜C(O)— wherein the terminal C(O) of L is attached to the N atom of X in formula (VII).


In another preferred aspect, the first strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (V) and the second strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (VI), wherein:

    • b is 0,
    • c and d are 1,
    • n is 0,
    • Z1 and Z2 are respectively the first and second strand of the nucleic acid,
    • Y is S,
    • L1 is of formula (VII), wherein:
      • W1, W3 and W5 are absent,
      • V is




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    • X is absent, and
      • L is —(CH2)4˜C(O)—NH—(CH2)5˜C(O)—, wherein the terminal C(O) of L is attached to the N atom of V in formula (VII).





In one aspect, the nucleic acid is conjugated to a triantennary ligand with the following structure:




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wherein the nucleic acid is conjugated to the triantennary ligand via the phosphate group of the ligand a) to the last nucleotide at the 5′ end of the second strand; b) to the last nucleotide at the 3′ end of the second strand; or c) to the last nucleotide at the 3′ end of the first strand.


In one aspect of the nucleic acid, the cells that are targeted by the nucleic acid with a ligand are hepatocytes.


In any one of the above ligands where GalNAc is present, the GalNAc may be substituted for any other targeting ligand, such as those mentioned herein, in particular mannose, galactose, glucose, glucosamine and fucose.


In one aspect, the nucleic acid is conjugated to a heterologous moiety that comprises a lipid, and more preferably, a cholesterol.


In one aspect, the double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of complement factor B (CFB) is one of the duplexes shown in Table 5c, which may be referred to by their Duplex ID number.


In one preferred aspect, the double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of complement factor B (CFB) is the duplex having the structure defined by one of the following Duplex IDs shown in Table 5c: EV2181, EV2182, EV2184, EV2185, EV2186, EV2189, EV2195, EV2196, EV2197, EV2198, EV2201, EV2204.


In one preferred aspect the double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of complement factor B (CFB) is a nucleic acid, wherein the first strand sequence comprises (vp)-mU fC mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU (SEQ ID No. 740) and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises [ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mA mU mC mA mA mA fG fC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mU (SEQ ID No: 730).


In one preferred aspect the double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of complement factor B (CFB) is a nucleic acid, wherein the first strand sequence consists of (vp)-mU fC mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU (SEQ ID No. 740) and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists of [ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mA mU mC mA mA mA fG fC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mU (SEQ ID No: 730).


In one preferred aspect the double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of complement factor B (CFB) is a nucleic acid, wherein the first strand sequence comprises (vp)-mU fU mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA (ps) fC (ps) mA (SEQ ID No. 742) and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises [ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mG mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU (ps) mA (ps) mU (SEQ ID No: 729).


In one preferred aspect the double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of complement factor B (CFB) is a nucleic acid, wherein the first strand sequence consists of (vp)-mU fU mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA (ps) fC (ps) mA (SEQ ID No. 742) and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists of [ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mG mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU (ps) mA (ps) mU (SEQ ID No: 729).


Compositions, Uses and Methods

The present invention also provides compositions comprising a nucleic acid of the invention. The nucleic acids and compositions may be used as therapeutic or diagnostic agents, alone or in combination with other agents. For example, one or more nucleic acid(s) of the invention can be combined with a delivery vehicle (e.g., liposomes) and/or excipients, such as carriers, diluents. Other agents such as preservatives and stabilizers can also be added. Pharmaceutically acceptable salts or solvates of any of the nucleic acids of the invention are likewise within the scope of the present invention. Methods for the delivery of nucleic acids are known in the art and within the knowledge of the person skilled in the art.


Compositions disclosed herein are particularly pharmaceutical compositions. Such compositions are suitable for administration to a subject.


In one aspect, the composition comprises a nucleic acid disclosed herein, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt or solvate thereof, and a solvent (preferably water) and/or a delivery vehicle and/or a physiologically acceptable excipient and/or a carrier and/or a salt and/or a diluent and/or a buffer and/or a preservative.


Pharmaceutically acceptable carriers or diluents include those used in formulations suitable for oral, rectal, nasal or parenteral (including subcutaneous, intramuscular, intravenous, intradermal, and transdermal) administration. The formulations may conveniently be presented in unit dosage form and may be prepared by any of the methods well known in the art of pharmacy. Subcutaneous or transdermal modes of administration may be particularly suitable for the compounds described herein.


The prophylactically or therapeutically effective amount of a nucleic acid of the present invention will depend on the route of administration, the type of mammal being treated, and the physical characteristics of the specific mammal under consideration. These factors and their relationship to determining this amount are well known to skilled practitioners in the medical arts. This amount and the method of administration can be tailored to achieve optimal efficacy, and may depend on such factors as weight, diet, concurrent medication and other factors, well known to those skilled in the medical arts. The dosage sizes and dosing regimen most appropriate for human use may be guided by the results obtained by the present invention, and may be confirmed in properly designed clinical trials.


An effective dosage and treatment protocol may be determined by conventional means, starting with a low dose in laboratory animals and then increasing the dosage while monitoring the effects, and systematically varying the dosage regimen as well. Numerous factors may be taken into consideration by a clinician when determining an optimal dosage for a given subject. Such considerations are known to the skilled person.


Nucleic acids of the present invention, or salts thereof, may be formulated as pharmaceutical compositions prepared for storage or administration, which typically comprise a prophylactically or therapeutically effective amount of a nucleic acid of the invention, or a salt thereof, in a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


The nucleic acid or conjugated nucleic acid of the present invention can also be administered in combination with other therapeutic compounds, either administrated separately or simultaneously, e.g., as a combined unit dose. The invention also includes a composition comprising one or more nucleic acids according to the present invention in a physiologically/pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, such as a stabilizer, preservative, diluent, buffer, and the like.


In one aspect, the composition comprises a nucleic acid disclosed herein and a further therapeutic agent selected from the group comprising an oligonucleotide, a small molecule, a monoclonal antibody, a polyclonal antibody and a peptide. Preferably, the further therapeutic agent is an agent that targets, preferably inhibits the expression or the activity, of CFB or of another element, such as a protein, of the immune system or more specifically of the complement pathway. Preferably, the further therapeutic agent is one of the following: a) a peptide that inhibits the expression or activity of one of the components of the complement pathway, preferably CFB, C3, C5 or one of their subunits or proteolytic cleavage products; b) an antibody that specifically binds under physiological conditions to one of the components of the complement pathway, preferably CFB, C3, C5 or one of their subunits or proteolytic cleavage products; c) Eculizumab or an antigen-binding derivative thereof.


Eculizumab is a humanised monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to the complement component C5 and is commercialised under the trade name SOLIRIS®. It specifically binds the complement component C5 with high affinity and inhibits cleavage of C5 to C5a and C5b. The antibody is for example described in the patent EP 0 758 904 B1 and its family members.


In certain embodiments, two or more nucleic acids of the invention with different sequences may be administered simultaneously or sequentially.


In another aspect, the present invention provides a composition, e.g., a pharmaceutical composition, comprising one or a combination of different nucleic acids of the invention and at least one pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


Dosage levels for the therapeutic agents and compositions of the invention can be determined by those skilled in the art by experimentation. In one aspect, a unit dose may contain between about 0.01 mg/kg and about 100 mg/kg body weight of nucleic acid or conjugated nucleic acid. Alternatively, the dose can be from 10 mg/kg to 25 mg/kg body weight, or 1 mg/kg to 10 mg/kg body weight, or 0.05 mg/kg to 5 mg/kg body weight, or 0.1 mg/kg to 5 mg/kg body weight, or 0.1 mg/kg to 1 mg/kg body weight, or 0.1 mg/kg to 0.5 mg/kg body weight, or 0.5 mg/kg to 1 mg/kg body weight. Alternatively, the dose can be from about 0.5 mg/kg to about 10 mg/kg body weight, or about 0.6 mg/kg to about 8 mg/kg body weight, or about 0.7 mg/kg to about 7 mg/kg body weight, or about 0.8 mg/kg to about 6 mg/kg body weight, or about 0.9 mg/kg to about 5.5 mg/kg body weight, or about 1 mg/kg to about 5 mg/kg body weight, or about 1 mg/kg body weight, or about 3 mg/kg body weight, or about 5 mg/kg body weight, wherein “about” is a deviation of up to 30%, preferably up to 20%, more preferably up to 10%, yet more preferably up to 5% and most preferably 0% from the indicated value. Dosage levels may also be calculated via other parameters such as, e.g., body surface area.


A dose unit of these nucleic acids preferably comprises about 1 mg/kg to about 5 mg/kg body weight, or about 1 mg/kg to about 3 mg/kg body weight, or about 1 mg/kg body weight, or about 3 mg/kg body weight, or about 5 mg/kg body weight. The CFB mRNA level in the liver and/or the CFB protein level in the plasma or blood of a subject treated by a dose unit of the nucleic acid is preferably decreased at the time point of maximum effect by at least 30%, at least 40%, at least 50%, at least 60% or at least 70% as compared to a control that was not treatment with the nucleic acid or treated with a control nucleic acid under comparable conditions.


The dosage and frequency of administration may vary depending on whether the treatment is therapeutic or prophylactic (e.g., preventative), and may be adjusted during the course of treatment. In certain prophylactic applications, a relatively low dosage is administered at relatively infrequent intervals over a relatively long period of time. Some subjects may continue to receive treatment over their lifetime. In certain therapeutic applications, a relatively high dosage at relatively short intervals is sometimes required until progression of the disease is reduced or until the patient shows partial or complete amelioration of symptoms of disease. Thereafter, the patient may be switched to a suitable prophylactic dosing regimen.


Actual dosage levels of a nucleic acid of the invention alone or in combination with one or more other active ingredients in the pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention may be varied so as to obtain an amount of the active ingredient which is effective to achieve the desired therapeutic response for a particular patient, composition, and mode of administration, without causing deleterious side effects to the subject or patient. A selected dosage level will depend upon a variety of factors, such as pharmacokinetic factors, including the activity of the particular nucleic acid or composition employed, the route of administration, the time of administration, the rate of excretion of the particular nucleic acid being employed, the duration of the treatment, other drugs, compounds and/or materials used in combination with the particular compositions employed, the age, sex, weight, condition, general health and prior medical history of the subject or patient being treated, and similar factors well known in the medical arts.


The pharmaceutical composition may be a sterile injectable aqueous suspension or solution, or in a lyophilized form.


The pharmaceutical compositions can be in unit dosage form. In such form, the composition is divided into unit doses containing appropriate quantities of the active component. The unit dosage form can be a packaged preparation, the package containing discrete quantities of the preparations, for example, packeted tablets, capsules, and powders in vials or ampoules. The unit dosage form can also be a capsule, cachet, or tablet itself, or it can be the appropriate number of any of these packaged forms. It may be provided in single dose injectable form, for example in the form of a pen. Compositions may be formulated for any suitable route and means of administration.


The therapeutic agents and pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention may be administered to a mammalian subject in a pharmaceutically effective dose. The mammal may be selected from a human, a non-human primate, a simian or prosimian, a dog, a cat, a horse, cattle, a pig, a goat, a sheep, a mouse, a rat, a hamster, a hedgehog and a guinea pig, or other species of relevance. On this basis, “CFB” as used herein denotes nucleic acid or protein in any of the above-mentioned species, if expressed therein naturally or artificially, but preferably this wording denotes human nucleic acids or proteins.


Pharmaceutical compositions of the invention may be administered alone or in combination with one or more other therapeutic or diagnostic agents. A combination therapy may include a nucleic acid of the present invention combined with at least one other therapeutic agent selected based on the particular patient, disease or condition to be treated. Examples of other such agents include, inter alia, a therapeutically active small molecule or polypeptide, a single chain antibody, a classical antibody or fragment thereof, or a nucleic acid molecule which modulates gene expression of one or more additional genes, and similar modulating therapeutics which may complement or otherwise be beneficial in a therapeutic or prophylactic treatment regimen.


Pharmaceutical compositions are typically sterile and stable under the conditions of manufacture and storage. The composition may be formulated as a solution, microemulsion, liposome, or other ordered structure suitable to high drug concentration. The carrier may be a solvent or dispersion medium containing, for example, water, alcohol such as ethanol, polyol (e.g., glycerol, propylene glycol, and liquid polyethylene glycol), or any suitable mixtures. The proper fluidity may be maintained, for example, by the use of a coating such as lecithin, by the maintenance of the required particle size in the case of dispersion and by use of surfactants according to formulation chemistry well known in the art. In certain embodiments, isotonic agents, e.g., sugars, polyalcohols such as mannitol, sorbitol, or sodium chloride may be desirable in the composition. Prolonged absorption of injectable compositions may be brought about by including in the composition an agent that delays absorption for example, monostearate salts and gelatine.


One aspect of the invention is a nucleic acid or a composition disclosed herein for use as a therapeutic agent. The nucleic acid or composition is preferably for use in the prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome.


The present invention provides a nucleic acid for use, alone or in combination with one or more additional therapeutic agents in a pharmaceutical composition, for treatment or prophylaxis of conditions, diseases and disorders responsive to inhibition of CFB expression.


One aspect of the invention is the use of a nucleic acid or a composition as disclosed herein in the prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome.


Nucleic acids and pharmaceutical compositions of the invention may be used in the treatment of a variety of conditions, disorders or diseases. Treatment with a nucleic acid of the invention preferably leads to in vivo CFB depletion, preferably in the liver and/or in blood. As such, nucleic acids of the invention, and compositions comprising them, will be useful in methods for treating a variety of pathological disorders in which inhibiting the expression of CFB may be beneficial. The present invention provides methods for treating a disease, disorder or syndrome comprising the step of administering to a subject in need thereof a prophylactically or therapeutically effective amount of a nucleic acid of the invention.


The invention thus provides methods of prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome, the method comprising the step of administering to a subject (e.g., a patient) in need thereof a therapeutically effective amount of a nucleic acid or pharmaceutical composition comprising a nucleic acid of the invention.


The most desirable therapeutically effective amount is an amount that will produce a desired efficacy of a particular treatment selected by one of skill in the art for a given subject in need thereof. This amount will vary depending upon a variety of factors understood by the skilled worker, including but not limited to the characteristics of the therapeutic compound (including activity, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and bioavailability), the physiological condition of the subject (including age, sex, disease type and stage, general physical condition, responsiveness to a given dosage, and type of medication), the nature of the pharmaceutically acceptable carrier or carriers in the formulation, and the route of administration. One skilled in the clinical and pharmacological arts will be able to determine a therapeutically effective amount through experimentation, namely by monitoring a subject's response to administration of a compound and adjusting the dosage accordingly. See, e.g., Remington: The Science and Practice of Pharmacy 21st Ed., Univ. of Sciences in Philadelphia (USIP), Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia, PA, 2005.


In certain embodiments, nucleic acids and pharmaceutical compositions of the invention may be used to treat or prevent a disease, disorder or syndrome.


In certain embodiments, the present invention provides methods for prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome in a mammalian subject, such as a human, the method comprising the step of administering to a subject in need thereof a prophylactically or therapeutically effective amount of a nucleic acid as disclosed herein.


Administration of a “therapeutically effective dosage” of a nucleic acid of the invention may result in a decrease in severity of disease symptoms, an increase in frequency and duration of disease symptom-free periods, or a prevention of impairment or disability due to the disease affliction.


Nucleic acids of the invention may be beneficial in treating or diagnosing a disease, disorder or syndrome that may be diagnosed or treated using the methods described herein. Treatment and diagnosis of other diseases, disorders or syndromes are also considered to fall within the scope of the present invention.


One aspect of the invention is a method of prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome comprising administering a pharmaceutically effective dose or amount a nucleic acid or a composition disclosed herein to an individual in need of treatment, preferably wherein the nucleic acid or composition is administered to the subject subcutaneously, intravenously or by oral, rectal, pulmonary, intramuscular or intraperitoneal administration. Preferably, it is administered subcutaneously.


The relevant disease, disorder or syndrome is preferably a complement-mediated disease, disorder or syndrome or a disease disorder or syndrome associated with the complement pathway, and particularly the alternative complement pathway.


The disease, disorder or syndrome is typically associated with aberrant activation and/or over-activation (hyper-activation) of the complement pathway (particularly the alternative pathway) and/or with over-expression or ectopic expression or localisation or accumulation of CFB, or the complement component C3. One example of a disease that involves accumulation of C3 is C3 glomerulopathy (C3G). In this disease, CFB accumulates in the kidney glomeruli. The aberrant or over activation of the complement pathway may have genetic causes or may be acquired.


The disease, disorder or syndrome may be a) selected from the group comprising, and preferably consisting of C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), lupus nephritis, IgA nephropathy (IgA N), myasthenia gravis (MG), primary membranous nephropathy, immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis (IC-mediated GN), post-infectious glomerulonephritis (PIGN), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), ischemia/reperfusion injury, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), dysbiotic periodontal disease, malarial anaemia, neuromyelitis optica, post-HCT/solid organ transplant (TMAs), Guillain-Barré syndrome, membranous glomerulonephritis, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and sepsis; or b) selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), lupus nephritis, IgA nephropathy (IgA N) and primary membranous nephropathy; or c) selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), myasthenia gravis (MG), IgA nephropathy (IgA N), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH); d) selected from the group comprising, or preferably consisting of C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), myasthenia gravis (MG), neuromyelitis optica, atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), IgA nephropathy (IgA N), post-HCT/solid organ transplant (TMAs), Guillain-Barré syndrome, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), membranous glomerulonephritis, lupus nephritis and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura; e) C3 glomerulopathy (C3G) and IgA nephropathy (IgA N); or f) it is C3 glomerulopathy (C3G). The subjects to be treated with a nucleic acid or composition according to the invention are preferably subjects that are affected by or are at risk of being affected by one of these diseases, disorders or syndromes.


A nucleic acid or compositions disclosed herein may be for use in a regimen comprising treatments once or twice weekly, every week, every two weeks, every three weeks, every four weeks, every five weeks, every six weeks, every seven weeks, every eight weeks, every nine weeks, every ten weeks, every eleven weeks, every twelve weeks, every three months, every four months, every five months, every six months or in regimens with varying dosing frequency such as combinations of the before-mentioned intervals. The nucleic acid or composition may be for use subcutaneously, intravenously or using any other application routes such as oral, rectal, pulmonary, or intraperitoneal. Preferably, it is for use subcutaneously.


In cells and/or subjects treated with or receiving a nucleic acid or composition as disclosed herein, the CFB expression may be inhibited compared to untreated cells and/or subjects by a range from 15% up to 100% but at least about 30%, 35%, 40%, 45%, 50%, 55%, 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 98%, or 100% or intermediate values. The level of inhibition may allow treatment of a disease associated with CFB expression or overexpression or complement over-activation, or may serve to further investigate the functions and physiological roles of the CFB gene products. The level of inhibition is preferably measured in the liver or in the blood or in the kidneys, preferably in the blood, of the subject treated with the nucleic acid or composition.


One aspect is the use of a nucleic acid or composition as disclosed herein in the manufacture of a medicament for treating a disease, disorder or syndromes, such as those as listed above or additional pathologies associated with elevated levels of CFB, preferably in the blood or in the kidneys, or over activation of the complement pathway, or additional therapeutic approaches where inhibition of CFB expression is desired. A medicament is a pharmaceutical composition.


Each of the nucleic acids of the invention and pharmaceutically acceptable salts and solvates thereof constitutes an individual embodiment of the invention.


Also included in the invention is a method of prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome, such as those listed above, comprising administration of a composition comprising a nucleic acid or composition as described herein, to an individual in need thereof. The nucleic acid or composition may, for example, be administered in a regimen comprising treatments twice every week, once every week, every two weeks, every three weeks, every four weeks, every five weeks, every six weeks, every seven weeks, or every eight to twelve or more weeks or in regimens with varying dosing frequency such as combinations of the before-mentioned intervals. The nucleic acid or conjugated nucleic acid may be for use subcutaneously or intravenously or other application routes such as oral, rectal or intraperitoneal.


A nucleic acid of the invention may be administered by any appropriate administration pathway known in the art, including but not limited to aerosol, enteral, nasal, ophthalmic, oral, parenteral, rectal, vaginal, or transdermal (e.g., topical administration of a cream, gel or ointment, or by means of a transdermal patch). “Parenteral administration” is typically associated with injection at or in communication with the intended site of action, including infraorbital, infusion, intraarterial, intracapsular, intracardiac, intradermal, intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intrapulmonary, intraspinal, intrasternal, intrathecal, intrauterine, intravenous, subarachnoid, subcapsular, subcutaneous, transmucosal, or transtracheal administration.


The use of a chemical modification pattern of the nucleic acids confers nuclease stability in serum and makes for example subcutaneous application route feasible.


Solutions or suspensions used for intradermal or subcutaneous application typically include one or more of: a sterile diluent such as water for injection, saline solution, fixed oils, polyethylene glycols, glycerine, propylene glycol or other synthetic solvents; antibacterial agents such as benzyl alcohol or methyl parabens; antioxidants such as ascorbic acid or sodium bisulfite; chelating agents such as ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; buffers such as acetates, citrates or phosphates; and/or tonicity adjusting agents such as, e.g., sodium chloride or dextrose. The pH can be adjusted with acids or bases, such as hydrochloric acid or sodium hydroxide, or buffers with citrate, phosphate, acetate and the like. Such preparations may be enclosed in ampoules, disposable syringes or multiple dose vials made of glass or plastic.


Sterile injectable solutions may be prepared by incorporating a nucleic acid in the required amount in an appropriate solvent with one or a combination of ingredients described above, as required, followed by sterilization microfiltration. Dispersions may be prepared by incorporating the active compound into a sterile vehicle that contains a dispersion medium and optionally other ingredients, such as those described above. In the case of sterile powders for the preparation of sterile injectable solutions, the methods of preparation are vacuum drying and freeze-drying (lyophilization) that yield a powder of the active ingredient in addition to any additional desired ingredient from a sterile-filtered solution thereof.


When a prophylactically or therapeutically effective amount of a nucleic acid of the invention is administered by, e.g., intravenous, cutaneous or subcutaneous injection, the nucleic acid will be in the form of a pyrogen-free, parenterally acceptable aqueous solution. Methods for preparing parenterally acceptable solutions, taking into consideration appropriate pH, isotonicity, stability, and the like, are within the skill in the art. A preferred pharmaceutical composition for intravenous, cutaneous, or subcutaneous injection will contain, in addition to a nucleic acid, an isotonic vehicle such as sodium chloride injection, Ringer's injection, dextrose injection, dextrose and sodium chloride injection, lactated Ringer's injection, or other vehicle as known in the art. A pharmaceutical composition of the present invention may also contain stabilizers, preservatives, buffers, antioxidants, or other additives well known to those of skill in the art.


The amount of nucleic acid which can be combined with a carrier material to produce a single dosage form will vary depending on a variety of factors, including the subject being treated, and the particular mode of administration. In general, it will be an amount of the composition that produces an appropriate therapeutic effect under the particular circumstances. Generally, out of one hundred percent, this amount will range from about 0.01% to about 99% of nucleic acid, from about 0.1% to about 70%, or from about 1% to about 30% of nucleic acid in combination with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


The nucleic acid may be prepared with carriers that will protect the compound against rapid release, such as a controlled release formulation, including implants, transdermal patches, and microencapsulated delivery systems. Biodegradable, biocompatible polymers can be used, such as ethylene vinyl acetate, polyanhydrides, polyglycolic acid, collagen, polyorthoesters, and polylactic acid. Many methods for the preparation of such formulations are patented or generally known to those skilled in the art. See, e.g., Sustained and Controlled Release Drug Delivery Systems, J. R. Robinson, ed., Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York, 1978.


Dosage regimens may be adjusted to provide the optimum desired response (e.g., a therapeutic response). For example, a dose may be administered, several divided doses may be administered over time, or the dose may be proportionally reduced or increased as indicated by the particular circumstances of the therapeutic situation, on a case-by-case basis. It is especially advantageous to formulate parenteral compositions in dosage unit forms for ease of administration and uniformity of dosage when administered to the subject or patient. As used herein, a dosage unit form refers to physically discrete units suitable as unitary dosages for the subjects to be treated; each unit containing a predetermined quantity of active compound calculated to produce a desired therapeutic effect. The specification for the dosage unit forms of the invention depends on the specific characteristics of the active compound and the particular therapeutic or prophylactic effect(s) to be achieved and the treatment and sensitivity of any individual patient.


The nucleic acid or composition of the present invention can be produced using routine methods in the art including chemical synthesis, such as solid phase chemical synthesis.


Nucleic acids or compositions of the invention may be administered with one or more of a variety of medical devices known in the art. For example, in one embodiment, a nucleic acid of the invention may be administered with a needleless hypodermic injection device. Examples of well-known implants and modules useful in the present invention are in the art, including e.g., implantable micro-infusion pumps for controlled rate delivery; devices for administering through the skin; infusion pumps for delivery at a precise infusion rate; variable flow implantable infusion devices for continuous drug delivery; and osmotic drug delivery systems. These and other such implants, delivery systems, and modules are known to those skilled in the art.


In certain embodiments, the nucleic acid or composition of the invention may be formulated to ensure a desired distribution in vivo. To target a therapeutic compound or composition of the invention to a particular in vivo location, they can be formulated, for example, in liposomes which may comprise one or more moieties that are selectively transported into specific cells or organs, thus enhancing targeted drug delivery.


The invention is characterized by high specificity at the molecular and tissue-directed delivery level. The sequences of the nucleic acids of the invention are highly specific for their target, meaning that they do not inhibit the expression of genes that they are not designed to target or only minimally inhibit the expression of genes that they are not designed to target and/or only inhibit the expression of a low number of genes that they are not designed to target. A further level of specificity is achieved when nucleic acids are linked to a ligand that is specifically recognised and internalised by a particular cell type. This is for example the case when a nucleic acid is linked to a ligand comprising GalNAc moieties, which are specifically recognised and internalised by hepatocytes. This leads to the nucleic acid inhibiting the expression of their target only in the cells that are targeted by the ligand to which they are linked. These two levels of specificity potentially confer a better safety profile than the currently available treatments. In certain embodiments, the present invention thus provides nucleic acids of the invention linked to a ligand comprising one or more GalNAc moieties, or comprising one or more other moieties that confer cell-type or tissue-specific internalisation of the nucleic acid thereby conferring additional specificity of target gene knockdown by RNA interference.


The nucleic acid as described herein may be formulated with a lipid in the form of a liposome. Such a formulation may be described in the art as a lipoplex. The composition with a lipid/liposome may be used to assist with delivery of the nucleic acid of the invention to the target cells. The lipid delivery system herein described may be used as an alternative to a conjugated ligand. The modifications herein described may be present when using the nucleic acid of the invention with a lipid delivery system or with a ligand conjugate delivery system.


Such a lipoplex may comprise a lipid composition comprising:

    • i) a cationic lipid, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof;
    • ii) a steroid;
    • iii) a phosphatidylethanolamine phospholipid; and/or
    • iv) a PEGylated lipid.


The cationic lipid may be an amino cationic lipid.


The cationic lipid may have the formula (XII):




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or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof, wherein:

    • X represents O, S or NH;
    • R1 and R2 each independently represents a C4-C22 linear or branched alkyl chain or a C4-C22 linear or branched alkenyl chain with one or more double bonds, wherein the alkyl or alkenyl chain optionally contains an intervening ester, amide or disulfide;
    • when X represents S or NH, R3 and R4 each independently represent hydrogen, methyl, ethyl, a mono- or polyamine moiety, or R3 and R4 together form a heterocyclyl ring; when X represents O, R3 and R4 each independently represent hydrogen, methyl, ethyl, a mono- or polyamine moiety, or R3 and R4 together form a heterocyclyl ring, or R3 represents hydrogen and R4 represents C(NH)(NH2).


The cationic lipid may have the formula (XIII):




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or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.


The cationic lipid may have the formula (XIV):




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or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.


The content of the cationic lipid component may be from about 55 mol % to about 65 mol % of the overall lipid content of the composition. In particular, the cationic lipid component is about 59 mol % of the overall lipid content of the composition.


The compositions can further comprise a steroid. The steroid may be cholesterol. The content of the steroid may be from about 26 mol % to about 35 mol % of the overall lipid content of the lipid composition. More particularly, the content of steroid may be about 30 mol % of the overall lipid content of the lipid composition.


The phosphatidylethanolamine phospholipid may be selected from the group consisting of 1,2-diphytanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DPhyPE), 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE), 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DSPE), 1,2-Dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DLPE), 1,2-Dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DMPE), 1,2-Dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DPPE), 1,2-Dilinoleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DLoPE), 1-Palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (POPE), 1,2-Dierucoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DEPE), 1,2-Disqualeoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DSQPE) and 1-Stearoyl-2-linoleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (SLPE). The content of the phospholipid may be about 10 mol % of the overall lipid content of the composition.


The PEGylated lipid may be selected from the group consisting of 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycerol, methoxypolyethylene glycol (DMG-PEG) and C16-Ceramide-PEG. The content of the PEGylated lipid may be about 1 to 5 mol % of the overall lipid content of the composition.


The content of the cationic lipid component in the composition may be from about 55 mol % to about 65 mol % of the overall lipid content of the lipid composition, preferably about 59 mol % of the overall lipid content of the lipid composition.


The composition may have a molar ratio of the components of i):ii):iii):iv) selected from 55:34:10:1; 56:33:10:1; 57:32:10:1; 58:31:10:1; 59:30:10:1; 60:29:10:1; 61:28:10:1; 62:27:10:1; 63:26:10:1; 64:25:10:1; and 65:24:10:1.


The composition may comprise a cationic lipid having the structure




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a steroid having the structure




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a phosphatidylethanolamine phospholipid having the structure




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and a PEGylated lipid having the structure




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Neutral liposome compositions may be formed from, for example, dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) or dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC). Anionic liposome compositions may be formed from dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol, while anionic fusogenic liposomes may be formed primarily from dioleoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE). Another type of liposomal composition may be formed from phosphatidylcholine (PC) such as, for example, soybean PC, and egg PC. Another type is formed from mixtures of phospholipid and/or phosphatidylcholine and/or cholesterol.


A positively charged synthetic cationic lipid, N-[1-(2,3-dioleyloxy)propyl]-N,N,N-trimethylammonium chloride (DOTMA) can be used to form small liposomes that interact spontaneously with nucleic acid to form lipid-nucleic acid complexes which are capable of fusing with the negatively charged lipids of the cell membranes of tissue culture cells. DOTMA analogues can also be used to form liposomes.


Derivatives and analogues of lipids described herein may also be used to form liposomes.


A liposome containing a nucleic acid can be prepared by a variety of methods. In one example, the lipid component of a liposome is dissolved in a detergent so that micelles are formed with the lipid component. For example, the lipid component can be an amphipathic cationic lipid or lipid conjugate. The detergent can have a high critical micelle concentration and may be nonionic. Exemplary detergents include cholate, CHAPS, octylglucoside, deoxycholate, and lauroyl sarcosine. The nucleic acid preparation is then added to the micelles that include the lipid component. The cationic groups on the lipid interact with the nucleic acid and condense around the nucleic acid to form a liposome. After condensation, the detergent is removed, e.g., by dialysis, to yield a liposomal preparation of nucleic acid.


If necessary, a carrier compound that assists in condensation can be added during the condensation reaction, e.g., by controlled addition. For example, the carrier compound can be a polymer other than a nucleic acid (e.g., spermine or spermidine). pH can also be adjusted to favour condensation.


Nucleic acid formulations of the present invention may include a surfactant. In one embodiment, the nucleic acid is formulated as an emulsion that includes a surfactant.


A surfactant that is not ionized is a non-ionic surfactant. Examples include non-ionic esters, such as ethylene glycol esters, propylene glycol esters, glyceryl esters etc., nonionic alkanolamides, and ethers such as fatty alcohol ethoxylates, propoxylated alcohols, and ethoxylated/propoxylated block polymers.


A surfactant that carries a negative charge when dissolved or dispersed in water is an anionic surfactant. Examples include carboxylates, such as soaps, acyl lactylates, acyl amides of amino acids, esters of sulfuric acid such as alkyl sulfates and ethoxylated alkyl sulfates, sulfonates such as alkyl benzene sulfonates, acyl isethionates, acyl taurates and sulfosuccinates, and phosphates.


A surfactant that carries a positive charge when dissolved or dispersed in water is a cationic surfactant. Examples include quaternary ammonium salts and ethoxylated amines.


A surfactant that has the ability to carry either a positive or negative charge is an amphoteric surfactant. Examples include acrylic acid derivatives, substituted alkylamides, N-alkylbetaines and phosphatides.


“Micelles” are defined herein as a particular type of molecular assembly in which amphipathic molecules are arranged in a spherical structure such that all the hydrophobic portions of the molecules are directed inward, leaving the hydrophilic portions in contact with the surrounding aqueous phase. The converse arrangement exists if the environment is hydrophobic. A micelle may be formed by mixing an aqueous solution of the nucleic acid, an alkali metal alkyl sulphate, and at least one micelle forming compound.


Exemplary micelle forming compounds include lecithin, hyaluronic acid, pharmaceutically acceptable salts of hyaluronic acid, glycolic acid, lactic acid, chamomile extract, cucumber extract, oleic acid, linoleic acid, linolenic acid, monoolein, monooleates, monolaurates, borage oil, evening of primrose oil, menthol, trihydroxy oxo cholanyl glycine and pharmaceutically acceptable salts thereof, glycerol, polyglycerol, lysine, polylysine, triolein, polyoxyethylene ethers and analogues thereof, polidocanol alkyl ethers and analogues thereof, chenodeoxycholate, deoxycholate, and mixtures thereof.


Phenol and/or m-cresol may be added to the mixed micellar composition to act as a stabiliser and preservative. An isotonic agent such as glycerine may as be added.


A nucleic acid preparation may be incorporated into a particle such as a microparticle. Microparticles can be produced by spray-drying, lyophilisation, evaporation, fluid bed drying, vacuum drying, or a combination of these methods.


Definitions

As used herein, the terms “inhibit”, “down-regulate”, or “reduce” with respect to gene expression mean that the expression of the gene, or the level of RNA molecules or equivalent RNA molecules encoding one or more proteins or protein subunits (e.g., mRNA), or the activity of one or more proteins or protein subunits, is reduced below that observed either in the absence of the nucleic acid or conjugated nucleic acid of the invention or as compared to that obtained with an siRNA molecule with no known homology to the human transcript (herein termed non-silencing control). Such control may be conjugated and modified in an analogous manner to the molecule of the invention and delivered into the target cell by the same route. The expression after treatment with the nucleic acid of the invention may be reduced to 95%, 90%, 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, 40%, 30%, 20%, 15%, 10%, 5% or 0% or to intermediate values, or less than that observed in the absence of the nucleic acid or conjugated nucleic acid. The expression may be measured in the cells to which the nucleic acid is applied. Alternatively, especially if the nucleic acid is administered to a subject, the level can be measured in a different group of cells or in a tissue or an organ or in a body fluid such as blood or plasma. The level of inhibition is preferably measured in conditions that have been selected because they show the greatest effect of the nucleic acid on the target mRNA level in cells treated with the nucleic acid in vitro. The level of inhibition may for example be measured after 24 hours or 48 hours of treatment with a nucleic acid at a concentration of between 0.038 nM-10 μM, preferably 0.5 nM, 1 nM, 10 nM or 100 nM. These conditions may be different for different nucleic acid sequences or for different types of nucleic acids, such as for nucleic acids that are unmodified or modified or conjugated to a ligand or not. Examples of suitable conditions for determining levels of inhibition are described in the examples.


By nucleic acid it is meant a nucleic acid comprising two strands comprising nucleotides, that is able to interfere with gene expression. Inhibition may be complete or partial and results in down regulation of gene expression in a targeted manner. The nucleic acid comprises two separate polynucleotide strands; the first strand, which may also be a guide strand; and a second strand, which may also be a passenger strand. The first strand and the second strand may be part of the same polynucleotide molecule that is self-complementary which ‘folds’ back to form a double-stranded molecule. The nucleic acid may be an siRNA molecule.


The nucleic acid may comprise ribonucleotides, modified ribonucleotides, deoxynucleotides, deoxyribonucleotides, or nucleotide analogues non-nucleotides that are able to mimic nucleotides such that they may ‘pair’ with the corresponding base on the target sequence or complementary strand. The nucleic acid may further comprise a double-stranded nucleic acid portion or duplex region formed by all or a portion of the first strand (also known in the art as a guide strand) and all or a portion of the second strand (also known in the art as a passenger strand). The duplex region is defined as beginning with the first base pair formed between the first strand and the second strand and ending with the last base pair formed between the first strand and the second strand, inclusive.


By duplex region it is meant the region in two complementary or substantially complementary oligonucleotides that form base pairs with one another, either by Watson-Crick base pairing or any other manner that allows for a duplex between oligonucleotide strands that are complementary or substantially complementary. For example, an oligonucleotide strand having 21 nucleotide units can base pair with another oligonucleotide of 21 nucleotide units, yet only 19 nucleotides on each strand are complementary or substantially complementary, such that the “duplex region” consists of 19 base pairs. The remaining base pairs may exist as 5′ and 3′ overhangs, or as single-stranded regions. Further, within the duplex region, 100% complementarity is not required; substantial complementarity is allowable within a duplex region. Substantial complementarity refers to complementarity between the strands such that they are capable of annealing under biological conditions. Techniques to empirically determine if two strands are capable of annealing under biological conditions are well known in the art. Alternatively, two strands can be synthesised and added together under biological conditions to determine if they anneal to one another. The portion of the first strand and second strand that forms at least one duplex region may be fully complementary and is at least partially complementary to each other. Depending on the length of a nucleic acid, a perfect match in terms of base complementarity between the first strand and the second strand is not necessarily required. However, the first and second strands must be able to hybridise under physiological conditions.


As used herein, the terms “non-pairing nucleotide analogue” means a nucleotide analogue which includes a non-base pairing moiety including but not limited to: 6 des amino adenosine (Nebularine), 4-Me-indole, 3-nitropyrrole, 5-nitroindole, Ds, Pa, N3-Me ribo U, N3-Me riboT, N3-Me dC, N3-Me-dT, N1-Me-dG, N1-Me-dA, N3-ethyl-dC, and N3-Me dC. In some embodiments the non-base pairing nucleotide analogue is a ribonucleotide. In other embodiments it is a deoxyribonucleotide.


As used herein, the term, “terminal functional group” includes without limitation a halogen, alcohol, amine, carboxylic, ester, amide, aldehyde, ketone, and ether groups.


An “overhang” as used herein has its normal and customary meaning in the art, i.e., a single-stranded portion of a nucleic acid that extends beyond the terminal nucleotide of a complementary strand in a double-strand nucleic acid. The term “blunt end” includes double-stranded nucleic acid whereby both strands terminate at the same position, regardless of whether the terminal nucleotide(s) are base-paired. The terminal nucleotide of a first strand and a second strand at a blunt end may be base paired. The terminal nucleotide of a first strand and a second strand at a blunt end may not be paired. The terminal two nucleotides of a first strand and a second strand at a blunt end may be base-paired. The terminal two nucleotides of a first strand and a second strand at a blunt end may not be paired.


The term “serinol-derived linker moiety” means the linker moiety comprises the following structure:




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An O atom of said structure typically links to an RNA strand and the N atom typically links to the targeting ligand.


The terms “patient,” “subject,” and “individual” may be used interchangeably and refer to either a human or a non-human animal. These terms include mammals such as humans, primates, livestock animals (e.g., bovines, porcines), companion animals (e.g., canines, felines) and rodents (e.g., mice and rats).


As used herein, “treating” or “treatment” and grammatical variants thereof refer to an approach for obtaining beneficial or desired clinical results. The term may refer to slowing the onset or rate of development of a condition, disorder or disease, reducing or alleviating symptoms associated with it, generating a complete or partial regression of the condition, or some combination of any of the above. For the purposes of this invention, beneficial or desired clinical results include, but are not limited to, reduction or alleviation of symptoms, diminishment of extent of disease, stabilization (i.e., not worsening) of state of disease, delay or slowing of disease progression, amelioration or palliation of the disease state, and remission (whether partial or total), whether detectable or undetectable. “Treatment” can also mean prolonging survival relative to expected survival time if not receiving treatment. A subject (e.g., a human) in need of treatment may thus be a subject already afflicted with the disease or disorder in question. The term “treatment” includes inhibition or reduction of an increase in severity of a pathological state or symptoms relative to the absence of treatment, and is not necessarily meant to imply complete cessation of the relevant disease, disorder or condition.


As used herein, the terms “prophylaxis” and grammatical variants thereof refer to an approach for inhibiting or preventing the development, progression, or time or rate of onset of a condition, disease or disorder, and may relate to pathology and/or symptoms. For the purposes of this invention, beneficial or desired clinical results include, but are not limited to, prevention, inhibition or slowing of symptoms, progression or development of a disease, whether detectable or undetectable. A subject (e.g., a human) in need of prophylaxis may thus be a subject not yet afflicted with the disease or disorder in question. The term “prophylaxis” includes slowing the onset of disease relative to the absence of treatment, and is not necessarily meant to imply permanent prevention of the relevant disease, disorder or condition. Thus “prophylaxis” of a condition may in certain contexts refer to reducing the risk of developing the condition, or preventing, inhibiting or delaying the development of symptoms associated with the condition. It will be understood that prophylaxis may be considered as treatment or therapy.


As used herein, an “effective amount,” “prophylactically effective amount”, “therapeutically effective amount” or “effective dose” is an amount of a composition (e.g., a therapeutic composition or agent) that produces at least one desired therapeutic effect in a subject, such as preventing or treating a target condition or beneficially alleviating a symptom associated with the condition.


As used herein, the term “pharmaceutically acceptable salt” refers to a salt that is not harmful to a patient or subject to which the salt in question is administered. It may be a salt chosen, e.g., among acid addition salts and basic salts. Examples of acid addition salts include chloride salts, citrate salts and acetate salts. Examples of basic salts include salts wherein the cation is selected from alkali metal cations, such as sodium or potassium ions, alkaline earth metal cations, such as calcium or magnesium ions, as well as substituted ammonium ions, such as ions of the type N(R1)(R2)(R3)(R4)+, wherein R1, R2, R3 and R4 independently will typically designate hydrogen, optionally substituted C1-6-alkyl groups or optionally substituted C2-6-alkenyl groups. Examples of relevant C1-6-alkyl groups include methyl, ethyl, 1-propyl and 2-propyl groups. Examples of C2-6-alkenyl groups of possible relevance include ethenyl, 1-propenyl and 2-propenyl. Other examples of pharmaceutically acceptable salts are described in “Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences”, 17th edition, Alfonso R. Gennaro (Ed.), Mark Publishing Company, Easton, PA, USA, 1985 (and more recent editions thereof), in the “Encyclopaedia of Pharmaceutical Technology”, 3rd edition, James Swarbrick (Ed.), Informa Healthcare USA (Inc.), NY, USA, 2007, and in J. Pharm. Sci. 66: 2 (1977). A “pharmaceutically acceptable salt” retains qualitatively a desired biological activity of the parent compound without imparting any undesired effects relative to the compound. Examples of pharmaceutically acceptable salts include acid addition salts and base addition salts. Acid addition salts include salts derived from nontoxic inorganic acids, such as hydrochloric, nitric, phosphorous, phosphoric, sulfuric, hydrobromic, hydroiodic and the like, or from nontoxic organic acids such as aliphatic mono- and di-carboxylic acids, phenyl-substituted alkanoic acids, hydroxy alkanoic acids, aromatic acids, aliphatic and aromatic sulfonic acids and the like. Base addition salts include salts derived from alkaline earth metals, such as sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium and the like, as well as from nontoxic organic amines, such as N, N′-dibenzylethylenediamine, N-methylglucamine, chloroprocaine, choline, diethanolamine, ethylenediamine, procaine and the like.


The term “pharmaceutically acceptable carrier” includes any of the standard pharmaceutical carriers. Pharmaceutically acceptable carriers for therapeutic use are well known in the pharmaceutical art, and are described, for example, in Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences, Mack Publishing Co. (A. R. Gennaro edit. 1985). For example, sterile saline and phosphate-buffered saline at slightly acidic or physiological pH may be used. Exemplary pH buffering agents include phosphate, citrate, acetate, tris/hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (TRIS), N-Tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl-3-aminopropanesulphonic acid (TAPS), ammonium bicarbonate, diethanolamine, histidine, which is a preferred buffer, arginine, lysine, or acetate or mixtures thereof. The term further encompasses any agents listed in the US Pharmacopeia for use in animals, including humans. A “pharmaceutically acceptable carrier” includes any and all physiologically acceptable, i.e., compatible, solvents, dispersion media, coatings, antimicrobial agents, isotonic and absorption delaying agents, and the like. In certain embodiments, the carrier is suitable for intravenous, intramuscular, subcutaneous, parenteral, spinal or epidermal administration (e.g., by injection or infusion). Depending on selected route of administration, the nucleic acid may be coated in a material or materials intended to protect the compound from the action of acids and other natural inactivating conditions to which the nucleic acid may be exposed when administered to a subject by a particular route of administration.


The term “solvate” in the context of the present invention refers to a complex of defined stoichiometry formed between a solute (in casu, a nucleic acid compound or pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof according to the invention) and a solvent. The solvent in this connection may, for example, be water or another pharmaceutically acceptable, typically small-molecular organic species, such as, but not limited to, acetic acid or lactic acid. When the solvent in question is water, such a solvate is normally referred to as a hydrate.


The invention will now be described with reference to the following non-limiting Figures and Examples.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES


FIG. 1 shows relative CFB mRNA expression in primary Cynomolgus monkey hepatocytes after incubation with GalNAc conjugated siRNAs normalized to PPIB mRNA. Ut represents target expression in untreated cells, and Ctr represents target expression after incubation with a non-targeting control siRNA.



FIG. 2 shows relative CFB mRNA expression in primary human hepatocytes after incubation with GalNac conjugated siRNAs normalized to PPIB mRNA. Ut represents target expression in untreated cells, and Ctr represents target expression after incubation with a non-targeting control siRNA.



FIG. 3 shows relative CFB mRNA expression in primary murine hepatocytes after incubation with siRNA GalNAc-conjugates normalized to APOB mRNA. Ut represents target expression in untreated cells, and Ctr represents target expression after incubation with a non-targeting control siRNA.



FIG. 4 shows relative CFB mRNA expression in primary mouse (A), human (B) and Cynomolgus monkey (C) hepatocytes after incubation with GalNAc-conjugated siRNAs to ApoB (A) or PPIB (B, C) mRNA.



FIG. 5A shows relative CFB mRNA expression in % in murine liver 14 days after a single dosing of 1 or 5 mg/kg of GalNAc conjugated siRNA EV2184, EV2185, EV2187, EV2188 and EV2195. One group dosed with PBS served as control. Data is shown in bar charts as mean±SD (n=5 per group). FIG. 5B shows relative CFB mRNA expression in % in murine liver 21 and 42 days after a single dosing of 1 or 5 mg/kg of GalNAc conjugated siRNA EV2184, EV2197, EV2185 and EV2200. One group dosed with PBS served as control. Data is shown in bar charts as mean±SD (n=4 per group).



FIG. 6 shows CFB mRNA reduction at 4 and 8 weeks post single subcutaneous dose of GalNAc conjugated siRNAs EV2196, EV2204 and EV2198.





EXAMPLES
Example 1

In vitro study in HepG2 cells showing CFB knockdown efficacy of tested siRNAs after transfection of 0.5 nM and 10 nM siRNA.


CFB knockdown efficacy of siRNAs EV2001-EV2180 (Table 5b) was determined after transfection of 0.5 or 10 nM siRNA in HepG2 cells. The results are depicted in Table 3 below. At 10 nM remaining CFB levels after knockdown were in the range of 6% to 84%, at 0.5 nM between 14% and 95%. At 10 nM the most potent siRNAs were EV2160, EV2159, EV2167, EV2050, EV2036, EV2101 and EV2042.


For transfection of HepG2 cells with siRNAs, cells were seeded at a density of 15,000 cells/well in 96-well tissue culture plates (TPP, Cat. 92096, Switzerland). Transfection of siRNA was carried out with Lipofectamine RNAiMax (Invitrogen/Life Technologies, Cat. 13778-500, Germany) according to manufacturer's instructions directly before seeding. The dual dose screen was performed with CFB siRNAs in triplicates at 10 nM and 0.5 nM, respectively, with scrambled siRNA and luciferase-targeting siRNA as unspecific controls. After 24h of incubation with siRNAs, medium was removed, and cells were lysed in 250 μl Lysis Buffer (InviTrap RNA Cell HTS96 Kit/C (Stratec, Cat. 7061300400, Germany)) and then frozen at −80° C. RNA was isolated using the InviTrap RNA Cell HTS96 Kit/C (Stratec, Cat. 7061300400, Germany). RT-qPCR was performed using CFB and PPIB specific primer probe sets and Takyon™ One-Step Low Rox Probe 5× MasterMix dTTP on the QuantStudio6 device from Applied Biosystems in single-plex 384 well format. Expression differences were calculated using the delta delta Ct method and relative expression of CFB normalized to the house keeping gene PPIB was determined. Results are expressed as % remaining CFB mRNA after siRNA transfection in Table 3.









TABLE 3







Results of dual dose screening (10 nM


and 0.5 nM) of siRNAs targeting CFB.












% remaining mRNA

% remaining mRNA




at 10 nM

at 0.5 nM













Duplex
Mean
SD
Mean
SD

















EV2001
40.6
3.3
84.7
10.1



EV2002
16.4
5.0
62.2
7.1



EV2003
32.6
5.2
87.9
2.9



EV2004
34.3
7.5
79.5
3.5



EV2005
8.9
2.0
32.9
4.3



EV2006
12.4
4.8
53.3
14.2



EV2007
38.7
6.6
75.3
6.1



EV2008
12.1
3.4
36.4
3.7



EV2009
13.3
2.3
39.8
0.3



EV2010
9.4
2.5
31.0
9.5



EV2011
12.1
0.6
28.2
7.1



EV2012
10.4
1.8
34.2
12.9



EV2013
12.0
3.4
46.3
12.2



EV2014
76.2
5.6
91.5
7.2



EV2015
20.6
3.6
72.8
6.8



EV2016
14.0
4.6
48.1
2.8



EV2017
8.1
0.7
32.5
8.2



EV2018
12.6
1.2
28.7
4.8



EV2019
13.2
1.8
44.9
4.0



EV2020
11.3
1.3
35.4
2.6



EV2021
36.6
3.7
82.6
6.4



EV2022
8.8
1.9
29.7
1.6



EV2023
12.4
0.8
31.7
1.8



EV2024
9.1
0.6
24.3
1.9



EV2025
18.2
0.4
70.9
9.6



EV2026
9.3
1.8
31.4
7.2



EV2027
13.6
2.9
45.4
5.6



EV2028
13.8
2.2
55.7
3.4



EV2029
9.9
1.8
23.2
3.8



EV2030
12.6
2.1
53.7
3.6



EV2031
10.8
1.3
32.3
4.1



EV2032
10.8
3.4
43.5
4.1



EV2033
21.7
2.6
61.7
2.8



EV2034
15.3
2.9
54.3
3.4



EV2035
16.8
3.0
46.3
5.9



EV2036
7.2
2.3
15.5
1.6



EV2037
29.6
1.9
75.2
4.8



EV2038
11.2
3.5
34.3
5.2



EV2039
32.9
2.3
76.2
5.4



EV2040
8.5
2.2
24.6
3.8



EV2041
9.8
1.0
23.7
3.2



EV2042
7.8
2.2
41.1
11.9



EV2043
60.6
8.8
86.7
5.6



EV2044
9.8
1.2
26.8
2.3



EV2045
15.9
4.5
58.4
6.4



EV2046
9.5
4.4
33.0
6.8



EV2047
11.6
1.5
18.5
2.3



EV2048
9.3
1.6
17.9
1.7



EV2049
9.8
2.0
26.7
1.3



EV2050
7.2
0.5
13.6
1.4



EV2051
12.9
1.4
34.2
9.3



EV2052
23.2
2.9
46.0
7.6



EV2053
17.3
2.0
48.0
6.2



EV2054
23.9
1.3
77.8
7.3



EV2055
37.2
0.9
83.3
9.4



EV2056
52.6
4.9
77.6
4.4



EV2057
49.0
2.9
89.4
6.5



EV2058
54.1
3.8
81.9
8.3



EV2059
38.0
3.2
86.9
2.8



EV2060
50.9
8.5
93.5
2.0



EV2061
53.6
7.6
94.7
2.6



EV2062
29.1
6.8
82.7
2.1



EV2063
19.3
2.6
52.8
7.7



EV2064
45.5
2.2
82.0
3.4



EV2065
15.4
1.8
62.0
5.7



EV2066
15.6
4.1
42.0
4.8



EV2067
49.9
1.8
89.6
4.4



EV2068
70.2
5.4
93.9
8.7



EV2069
26.7
3.0
64.2
2.6



EV2070
15.4
3.4
54.1
3.7



EV2071
23.9
0.3
60.5
6.8



EV2072
22.1
5.0
76.3
7.7



EV2073
15.2
3.7
51.4
8.9



EV2074
18.3
1.6
44.2
5.0



EV2075
27.0
4.6
66.8
7.6



EV2076
19.7
2.3
43.7
7.5



EV2077
28.0
5.6
68.9
6.0



EV2078
41.5
4.3
78.3
4.4



EV2079
40.5
0.9
82.4
1.7



EV2080
31.5
1.5
75.3
6.1



EV2081
15.3
3.0
27.8
2.1



EV2082
16.8
1.4
45.0
6.9



EV2083
26.3
6.1
64.8
3.3



EV2084
17.9
2.8
38.9
7.7



EV2085
31.8
1.0
65.6
7.9



EV2086
19.3
2.6
37.7
4.1



EV2087
15.2
1.0
39.3
6.8



EV2088
20.9
2.8
43.8
5.2



EV2089
20.1
1.2
39.0
9.0



EV2090
20.8
3.7
57.5
10.1



EV2091
28.4
5.5
72.8
10.2



EV2092
51.7
6.9
76.7
3.4



EV2093
28.2
1.4
75.5
2.3



EV2094
24.3
5.5
66.1
4.3



EV2095
10.9
3.1
35.3
11.4



EV2096
21.6
4.8
63.1
7.8



EV2097
20.1
2.6
45.7
10.6



EV2098
18.9
2.0
55.8
10.2



EV2099
13.1
2.2
38.6
8.2



EV2100
12.2
0.5
23.0
3.5



EV2101
7.5
0.2
17.4
1.5



EV2102
9.3
0.5
51.3
8.4



EV2103
16.7
1.3
42.6
5.8



EV2104
11.4
0.1
48.0
6.8



EV2105
9.1
1.0
23.4
1.5



EV2106
9.0
0.9
28.0
6.1



EV2107
7.8
1.2
20.7
1.1



EV2108
10.6
1.1
29.1
3.1



EV2109
38.3
8.7
93.7
6.7



EV2110
9.7
0.8
35.7
6.3



EV2111
29.7
3.4
73.6
6.6



EV2112
17.1
1.0
47.5
7.7



EV2113
18.4
1.8
61.8
9.7



EV2114
12.4
0.5
32.2
0.5



EV2115
14.4
1.4
37.4
0.8



EV2116
24.4
2.8
46.6
6.9



EV2117
8.1
2.9
48.9
4.9



EV2118
19.4
1.1
55.1
2.5



EV2119
42.8
5.6
94.3
7.5



EV2120
40.5
2.8
92.1
6.0



EV2121
18.5
0.8
70.9
1.2



EV2122
26.4
1.2
75.8
5.2



EV2123
31.2
2.1
62.8
4.8



EV2124
22.0
3.4
71.3
3.3



EV2125
9.9
0.7
29.1
5.4



EV2126
15.5
3.4
49.8
5.5



EV2127
21.7
2.8
75.5
8.0



EV2128
17.6
0.4
49.1
1.0



EV2129
23.5
3.2
57.7
4.2



EV2130
21.6
1.4
66.7
4.1



EV2131
20.4
2.0
46.0
2.0



EV2132
60.1
3.3
91.2
4.4



EV2133
15.4
6.7
35.2
3.5



EV2134
12.8
2.3
53.1
5.9



EV2135
15.4
6.7
39.7
3.9



EV2136
52.7
7.1
81.8
3.2



EV2137
15.0
2.7
40.8
6.7



EV2138
14.8
3.1
52.1
7.2



EV2139
17.2
2.8
46.0
3.4



EV2140
48.1
1.2
83.5
2.1



EV2141
12.3
0.8
35.6
7.4



EV2142
10.8
1.8
29.9
6.8



EV2143
13.4
3.0
22.0
5.3



EV2144
13.6
3.7
22.0
6.3



EV2145
21.4
4.1
19.3
4.5



EV2146
16.7
4.3
32.7
5.4



EV2147
13.3
3.2
22.8
2.7



EV2148
14.1
4.4
14.6
2.1



EV2149
11.7
5.1
22.5
2.8



EV2150
22.0
1.0
66.3
3.9



EV2151
75.6
6.3
87.6
4.5



EV2152
27.9
12.0
55.6
1.3



EV2153
59.5
9.8
93.3
2.3



EV2154
30.4
7.8
72.3
6.7



EV2155
33.7
6.7
80.0
4.9



EV2156
11.2
5.1
38.0
3.8



EV2157
21.7
5.6
40.4
5.9



EV2158
13.3
4.8
40.1
6.3



EV2159
6.8
1.8
18.7
6.9



EV2160
6.1
1.4
21.0
5.1



EV2161
20.7
2.8
65.5
11.6



EV2162
83.9
2.7
93.8
1.5



EV2163
12.7
0.7
52.2
8.7



EV2164
11.2
1.4
46.1
12.3



EV2165
16.2
4.2
54.8
12.1



EV2166
26.8
4.0
79.2
2.9



EV2167
7.1
2.1
32.3
2.9



EV2168
14.6
6.9
63.4
6.8



EV2169
20.4
1.0
88.4
2.5



EV2170
11.1
1.1
30.5
6.8



EV2171
13.4
2.4
38.6
6.0



EV2172
14.3
2.0
54.0
5.8



EV2173
16.2
2.6
26.6
2.0



EV2174
52.9
3.7
74.6
8.0



EV2175
12.0
3.4
23.6
2.7



EV2176
14.1
5.3
51.7
6.5



EV2177
20.6
6.3
46.0
2.9



EV2178
16.6
1.9
51.7
9.1



EV2179
30.5
3.5
76.7
9.8



EV2180
84.3
3.9
86.4
6.4










The identity of the single strands forming each of the siRNA duplexes as well as their sequences and modifications are to be found in the tables at the end of the description.


Example 2

In vitro study in primary Cynomolgus monkey hepatocytes showing CFB knockdown efficacy of tested siRNA-GalNAc-conjugates.


Expression of CFB mRNA was assessed after incubation with the GalNAc siRNA conjugates at 100 nM, 10 nM, 1 nM, 0.1 nM and 0.01 nM. siRNA conjugates are listed in Table 5c. mRNA level of the house keeping gene PPIB served as control.


To test the knockdown efficacy of the GalNac conjugated siRNAs for CFB in primary Cynomolgus monkey hepatocytes, 45,000 cells per well (Supplier: Life Technologies and Primacyt) were seeded on collagen-coated 96-well plates (Life Technologies). siRNAs in concentrations between 100 nM and 0.01 nM were added immediately after seeding. 24 hours post treatment, cells were lysed using InviTrap RNA Cell HTS96 Kit/C (Stratec). RT-qPCR was performed using mRNA-specific primers and probes against CFB and PPIB. Expression differences were calculated using the delta delta Ct method and relative expression of CFB normalized to the house keeping gene PPIB were determined. Results are expressed as ratio of CFB to PPIB mRNA relative to untreated levels and can be found in FIG. 1.


Dose dependent knockdown of CFB mRNA was observed for all tested GalNAc conjugates, with the strongest dose dependent target knockdown observed with EV2181, EV2182, EV2185, EV2186, EV2190 and EV2195.


Example 3

In vitro study in primary human hepatocytes showing CFB knockdown efficacy of tested siRNA-GalNAc-conjugates.


Expression of CFB mRNA was assessed after incubation with the GalNAc siRNA conjugates at 100 nM, 20 nM, 4 nM, 0.8 nM and 0.16 nM. Tested siRNA conjugates are listed in Table 5c. mRNA levels of the house keeping gene PPIB served as control.


To test the knockdown efficacy of the GalNAc conjugated siRNAs for CFB in primary human hepatocytes 35 000 cells per well (Supplier: Life technologies) were seeded on collagen-coated 96-well plates (Life technologies). siRNAs in concentrations between 100 nM and 0.16 nM were added immediately after seeding. 24 hours post treatment, cells were lysed using InviTrap RNA Cell HTS96 Kit/C (Stratec). RT-qPCR was performed using mRNA-specific primers and probes against CFB and PPIB. Expression differences were calculated using the delta delta Ct method and relative expression of CFB was normalized to expression of the house keeping gene PPIB. Results are expressed as ratio of CFB to PPIB mRNA relative to untreated levels and can be found in FIG. 2.


Dose dependent knockdown of CFB mRNA was observed for all tested GalNAc conjugates, strongest dose dependent target knockdown was observed with EV2181, EV2182, EV2184, EV2185, EV2186, EV2190 and EV2193.


Example 4

In vitro study in primary mouse hepatocytes showing CFB knockdown efficacy of tested siRNA-GalNAc-conjugates.


Expression of CFB mRNA was assessed after incubation with the GalNAc siRNA conjugates at 100 nM, 10 nM, 1 nM, 0.1 nM and 0.01 nM. siRNA conjugates are listed in Table 5c. mRNA level of the house keeping gene ApoB served as control.


To test the knockdown efficacy of the GalNAc conjugated siRNAs for CFB in primary mouse hepatocytes, 25,000 cells per well (Supplier: Life Technologies and Primacyt)) were seeded on collagen-coated 96-well plates (Life Technologies). siRNAs in concentrations between 100 nM and 0.01 nM were added immediately after seeding. 24 hours post treatment, cells were lysed using InviTrap RNA Cell HTS96 Kit/C (Stratec). qPCR was performed using mRNA-specific primers and probes against CFB and ApoB. Expression differences were calculated using the delta delta Ct method and relative expression of CFB was normalized to expression of the house keeping gene ApoB. Results are expressed as ratio of CFB to ApoB mRNA relative to untreated levels and can be found in FIG. 3.


Dose dependent knockdown of CFB mRNA was observed for all tested GalNAc conjugates, strongest dose dependent target knockdown was observed with EV2184, EV2185 and EV2188.


Example 5

In vitro study in primary mouse, human and Cynomolgus monkey hepatocytes showing CFB knockdown efficacy of tested siRNA-GalNAc conjugates.


Expression of CFB mRNA after incubation with the GalNAc siRNA conjugates EV2196, EV2197, EV2198, EV2199, EV2200, EV2201, EV2202, EV2203, EV2204, EV2205 and EV2206


siRNA conjugates are listed in Table 5c. mRNA level of the house keeping gene PPIB (for Cynomolgus monkey and human cells) or APOB (for mouse cells) served as control.


Mouse, human or cynomolgus monkey primary hepatocytes were seeded into collagen I-coated 96-well plates at a density of 25,000, 30,000 or 40,000 cells per well, respectively.


GalNAc-conjugated siRNAs were added immediately after plating in the previously defined media to final siRNA concentrations from 100 nM to 0.01 nM. Plates were then incubated at 37° C. in a 5% CO2 atmosphere for 24 hours. Subsequently, cells were lysed and RNA was isolated using InviTrap RNA Cell HTS96 Kit/C (Stratec). Ten μl of RNA-solution was used for gene expression analysis by reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) performed with amplicon sets/sequences for CFB and PPIB or ApoB. Data was calculated by using the comparative CT method also known as the 2-delta delta Ct method.


All tested GalNAc-conjugated siRNAs decreased CFB mRNA expression concentration-dependently.


Results are shown in FIG. 4, where panels (A), (B) and (C) respectively show relative CFB mRNA expression in primary mouse (A), human (B) and Cynomolgus monkey (C) hepatocytes.


Example 6

In vivo study showing knockdown of CFB mRNA in murine liver tissue after single subcutaneous dosing of 1 or 5 mg/kg GalNAc conjugated siRNA at different time points.


siRNA conjugates are listed in Table 5c. mRNA level of the house keeping gene ACTB served as housekeeping control.


Male C57BL/6 mice with an age of 8 weeks were obtained from Janvier, France. Animal experiments were performed according to ethical guidelines of the German Protection of Animals Act in its version of July 2013. Mice were randomized according to weight into groups of 4 or 5 mice. On day 0 of the studies animals received a single subcutaneous dose of 1 or 5 mg/kg siRNA dissolved in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) or PBS only as control. The viability, body weight and behaviour of the mice was monitored during the study without pathological findings.


At day 14 (FIG. 5A), or at day 21 and day 42 (FIG. 5B) the studies were terminated, animals were euthanized, and liver samples were snap frozen and stored at −80° C. until further analysis. For analysis, in summary, total RNA was prepared with RNeasy Fibrous Tissue Mini Kit (QIAGEN, Venlo, Netherlands) according to the manufacturer's instruction. To assess the integrity of isolated RNA, automated electrophoresis was performed using a 2100 Bioanalyzer (Agilent Technologies, Inc., Santa Clara, USA). One hundred nanograms per reaction of total RNA was used for RT-qPCR with the amplicon sets specific for mouse CFB and ACTB.


Expression differences were calculated using the delta delta Ct method and relative expression of CFB versus the house keeping gene ACTB normalized to the PBS was used for comparison of the different siRNAs. EV2184, EV2185, EV2187, EV2188 and EV2195 induced a dose dependent knockdown of liver CFB mRNA. The maximum achieved knockdown was observed after 14 days using EV2184, EV2187 and EV2188 at 5 mg/kg siRNA, with 90%, 89% and 87% respectively (FIG. 5A).


siRNA conjugates EV2184, EV2197, EV2185 and EV2200 in the second experiment also induced a dose dependent knockdown of liver CFB mRNA. The maximum achieved knockdown was observed after 21 days using the siRNAs EV2197 and EV2200 at 5 mg/kg siRNA (with 94% and 88%, respectively). The maximum achieved knockdown after 42 days was 88% and 77%, respectively using EV2197 and EV2200 at 5 mg/kg siRNA (FIG. 5B).


Example 7

Synthesis of (vp)-mU-phos was performed as described in Prakash, Nucleic Acids Res. 2015, 43(6), 2993-3011 and Haraszti, Nucleic Acids Res. 2017, 45(13), 7581-7592. Synthesis of the phosphoramidite derivatives of ST41 (ST41-phos) as well as ST23 (ST23-phos) can be performed as described in WO2017/174657. Synthesis of Phosphorthioamidites was performed as described in Caruthers, J. Org. Chem. 1996, 61, 4272-4281.


Example 8

Example compounds were synthesized according to methods described below and known to persons of skill in the art. Assembly of the oligonucleotide chain and linker building blocks was performed by solid phase synthesis applying phosphoramidite methodology.


Downstream cleavage, deprotection and purification were performed following standard procedures that are well known in the art.


Oligonucleotide syntheses was performed on an AKTA oligopilot 10 using commercially available 2′O-Methyl RNA and 2′Fluoro-2′Deoxy RNA base loaded CPG solid support and phosphoramidites (all standard protection, ChemGenes, LinkTech) were used.


Ancillary reagents were purchased from EMP Biotech and Biosolve. Synthesis was performed using a 0.1 M solution of the phosphoramidite in dry acetonitrile (<20 ppm H2O) and benzylthiotetrazole (BTT) was used as activator (0.3M in acetonitrile). Coupling time was 10 min. If phosphorthioamidites were used to introduce a phosphordithioate linkage (PS2) a repeated coupling wash cycle over 60 min was performed. A Cap/OX/Cap or Cap/Thio/Cap cycle was applied (Cap: Ac2O/NMI/Lutidine/Acetonitrile, Oxidizer: 0.05M I2 in pyridine/H2O). Phosphorothioates and phosphordithioates were introduced using commercially available thiolation reagent 50 mM EDITH in acetonitrile (Link technologies). DMT cleavage was achieved by treatment with 3% dichloroacetic acid in toluene. Upon completion of the programmed synthesis cycles a diethylamine (DEA) wash was performed. All oligonucleotides were synthesized in DMT-off mode.


Tri-antennary GalNAc clusters (ST23/ST41) were introduced by successive coupling of the branching trebler amidite derivative (C4XLT-phos) followed by the GalNAc amidite (ST23-phos). Attachment of (vp)-mU moiety was achieved by use of (vp)-mU-phos in the last synthesis cycle. The (vp)-mU-phos does not provide a hydroxy group suitable for further synthesis elongation and therefore, does not possess an DMT-group. Hence coupling of (vp)-mU-phos results in synthesis termination.


For the removal of the methyl esters masking the vinylphosphonate, the CPG carrying the fully assembled oligonucleotide was dried under reduced pressure and transferred into a 20 ml PP syringe reactor for solid phase peptide synthesis equipped with a disc frit (Carl Roth GmbH). The CPG was then brought into contact with a solution of 250 μL TMSBr and 177 μL pyridine in CH2Cl2 (0.5 ml/pmol solid support bound oligonucleotide) at room temperature and the reactor was sealed with a Luer cap. The reaction vessels were slightly agitated over a period of 2×15 min, the excess reagent discarded, and the residual CPG washed 2× with 10 ml acetonitrile. Further downstream processing did not alter from any other example compound.


The single strands were cleaved off the CPG by 40% aq. methylamine treatment (in presence of 20 mM DTT if phosphorodithioate linkages were present) in 90 min at RT. The resulting crude oligonucleotide was purified by ion exchange chromatography (Resource Q, 6 ml, GE Healthcare) on an AKTA Pure HPLC System using a sodium chloride gradient. Product containing fractions were pooled, desalted on a size exclusion column (Zetadex, EMP Biotech) and lyophilized until further use.


All final single-stranded products were analysed by AEX-HPLC to prove their purity. Identity of the respective single-stranded products was proved by LC-MS analysis.


Example 9

Individual single strands were dissolved in a concentration of 60 OD/ml in H2O. Both individual oligonucleotide solutions were added together in a reaction vessel. For easier reaction monitoring a titration was performed. The first strand was added in 25% excess over the second strand as determined by UV-absorption at 260 nm. The reaction mixture was heated to 80° C. for 5 min and then slowly cooled to RT. Double-strand formation was monitored by ion pairing reverse phase HPLC. From the UV-area of the residual single strand the needed amount of the second strand was calculated and added to the reaction mixture. The reaction was heated to 80° C. again and slowly cooled to RT. This procedure was repeated until less than 10% of residual single strand was detected.


Example 10

In vitro study in HepG2 cells showing CFB knockdown efficacy of tested siRNAs after transfection of 20, 4, 0.8, 0.16, or 0.032 nM siRNA.


CFB knockdown efficacy of selected siRNAs (Table 5b) was determined after transfection of 20, 4, 0.8, or 0.16 nM siRNA in HepG2 cells. The results are depicted in Table 6 below. At 20 nM, remaining CFB levels after knockdown reached a minimum of 32% and at 4 nM reached a minimum of 43%.


For transfection of HepG2 cells with siRNAs, cells were seeded at a density of 40,000 cells/well in 96-well tissue culture plates (TPP, Cat. 92096, Switzerland). Transfection of siRNA was carried out with Lipofectamine RNAiMax (Invitrogen/Life Technologies, Cat. 13778-500, Germany) according to manufacturer's instructions directly before seeding. The dose-response screen was performed with CFB siRNAs in triplicates at 20, 4, 0.8, 0.16, or 0.032 nM, respectively, with scrambled siRNA and luciferase-targeting siRNA as unspecific controls. After 24 h of incubation with siRNAs, medium was removed, and cells were lysed in 250 μL Lysis Buffer (InviTrap RNA Cell HTS96 Kit/C (Stratec, Cat. 7061300400, Germany)) and then frozen at −80° C. RNA was isolated using the InviTrap RNA Cell HTS96 Kit/C (Stratec, Cat. 7061300400, Germany). RT-qPCR was performed using CFB and PPIB specific primer probe sets and Takyon™ One-Step Low Rox Probe 5× MasterMix dTTP on the QuantStudio6 device from Applied Biosystems in single-plex 384 well format. Expression differences were calculated using the delta delta Ct method and relative expression of CFB normalized to the house keeping gene PPIB was determined. Results are expressed as % remaining CFB mRNA after siRNA transfection in Table 6.









TABLE 6







Results of dose-response screening (20, 4, 0.8, 0.16, 0.032 nM)


of siRNAs targeting CFB.


The identity of the single strands forming each of the siRNA duplexes


as well as their sequences and modifications are to be found in Table 5b.











Concentration
% remaining mRNA













Duplex
(nM)
Mean
SD
















EV2211
20
32
1




4
43
3




0.8
52
9




0.16
63
9




0.032
70
4



EV2212
20
34
3




4
49
8




0.8
59
10




0.16
66
6




0.032
85
6










Example 11

In vivo study showing knockdown of CFB mRNA in non-human primates (NHP).


The objective of this experiment was to determine mRNA knockdown efficacy of siRNA GalNAc conjugates targeting CFB in vivo in non-human primates (NHPs).


Purpose bred cynomolgus monkeys (24 to 48 months old, males and females) were allocated to different treatment groups (4 animals per group). On day 1, each group was treated with a single dose of 3 mg GalNAc siRNA per kg body weight by subcutaneous injection, while control animals received the vehicle, 0.9% saline, by subcutaneous injection. Pre-dose, after 4 weeks and after 8 weeks liver samples were collected from each animal by survival biopsy and snap frozen. RNA was extracted from liver samples and CFB and ApoB mRNA levels were determined by Taqman qRT-PCR. Values obtained for CFB mRNA were normalized to values generated for the house keeping gene, Apo B. CFB mRNA expression relative to ApoB expression at the predose timepoint for each individual was set at 1-fold target gene expression.


Results of CFB mRNA reduction 4 and 8 weeks post single subcutaneous dose of GalNAc conjugated siRNAs EV2196, EV2204 and EV2198 are shown in FIG. 6. CFB levels in liver tissue of cynomolgus monkeys collected 4 weeks after single treatment with EV2196 were reduced on average by 61% and after 8 weeks by 55%. CFB levels in liver tissue of cynomolgus monkeys collected 4 weeks after single treatment with EV2204 were reduced on average by 22% and after 8 weeks no reduction could be observed. CFB levels in liver tissue of cynomolgus monkeys collected 4 weeks after single treatment with EV2198 were reduced on average by 57% and after 8 weeks by 32%.


Statements

The following statements represent aspects of the invention.

    • 1. A double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of complement factor B (CFB), wherein the nucleic acid comprises a first strand and a second strand, wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of at least 15 nucleotides differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences shown in Table 5a, or of Table 1.
    • 2. The nucleic acid of statement 1, wherein the first strand and the second strand are separate strands and are each 18-25 nucleotides in length.
    • 3. The nucleic acid of statement 1 or statement 2, wherein the first strand and the second strand form a duplex region of from 17-25 nucleotides in length.
    • 4. The nucleic acid of any one of the preceding statements, wherein the duplex region consists of 17-25 consecutive nucleotide base pairs.
    • 5. The nucleic acid of any one of the preceding statements, wherein said nucleic acid:
      • a) is blunt ended at both ends;
      • b) has an overhang at one end and a blunt end at the other end; or
      • c) has an overhang at both ends.
    • 6. The nucleic acid of any one of the preceding statements, wherein the nucleic acid is a siRNA.
    • 7. The nucleic acid of any one of the preceding statements, wherein the nucleic acid mediates RNA interference.
    • 8. The nucleic acid of any one of the preceding statements wherein:
    • (a) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (b) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (c) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (d) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (e) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (f) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (g) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (h) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence; or
    • (i) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5a, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence consists of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence.
    • 9. The nucleic acid of statement 8 wherein:
    • (a) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (b) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (c) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (d) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (e) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (f) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (g) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (h) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (i) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence consists of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (j) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists essentially of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence consists essentially of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1;
    • (k) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1,
      • wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1, and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown Table 1;
    • (l) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1,
      • wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1, and wherein said unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence consists of a contiguous region of from 17-25 nucleotides in length, preferably of from 18-24 nucleotides in length, complementary to the CFB transcript of SEQ ID NO. 758; and optionally wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 1;
    • (m) unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are present on a single strand wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length; or
    • (n) the unmodified equivalent of the first strand and the unmodified equivalent of the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (I) above are on two separate strands that are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length.
    • 10. The nucleic acid of any one of the preceding statements, wherein at least one nucleotide of the first and/or second strand is a modified nucleotide.
    • 11. The nucleic acid of statement 10, wherein at least nucleotides 2 and 14 of the first strand are modified by a first modification, the nucleotides being numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand.
    • 12 The nucleic acid of statement 10 or statement 11, wherein each of the even-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a first modification, the nucleotides being numbered consecutively starting with nucleotide number 1 at the 5′ end of the first strand.
    • 13. The nucleic acid of statement 11 or statement 12, wherein the odd-numbered nucleotides of the first strand are modified by a second modification, wherein the second modification is different from the first modification.
    • 14. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 11 to 13, wherein the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an even-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified by a third modification, wherein the third modification is different from the first modification.
    • 15. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 11 to 14, wherein the nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to an odd-numbered nucleotide of the first strand are modified by a fourth modification, wherein the fourth modification is different from the second modification and different from the third modification when a second and/or a third modification are present.
    • 16. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 11 to 13, wherein the nucleotide/nucleotides of the second strand in a position corresponding to nucleotide 11 or nucleotide 13 or nucleotides 11 and 13 or nucleotides 11-13 of the first strand is/are modified by a fourth modification and preferably wherein the nucleotides of the second strand that are not modified by a fourth modification are modified by a third modification.
    • 17. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 11 to 16, wherein the first modification is the same as the fourth modification if both modifications are present in the nucleic acid and preferably wherein the second modification is the same as the third modification if both modifications are present in the nucleic acid.
    • 18. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 11 to 17, wherein the first modification is a 2′-F modification; the second modification, if present in the nucleic acid, is preferably a 2′-OMe modification; the third modification, if present in the nucleic acid, is preferably a 2′-OMe modification; and the fourth modification, if present in the nucleic acid, is preferably a 2′-F modification.
    • 19. The nucleic acid of any one statements 10 to 18, wherein each of the nucleotides of the first strand and of the second strand is a modified nucleotide.
    • 20. The nucleic acid of any one statements 10 to 18, wherein the first strand has a terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide at its 5′ end and wherein the terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide is preferably linked to the second nucleotide in the first strand by a phosphodiester linkage.
    • 21. The nucleic acid of any one of the preceding statements, wherein the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal two or three 3′ nucleotides and/or 5′ nucleotides of the first and/or the second strand and preferably wherein the linkages between the remaining nucleotides are phosphodiester linkages.
    • 22. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 1 to 20, comprising a phosphorodithioate linkage between each of the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the first strand and/or comprising a phosphorodithioate linkage between each of the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the second strand and/or a phosphorodithioate linkage between each of the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 5′ end of the second strand and comprising a linkage other than a phosphorodithioate linkage between the two, three or four terminal nucleotides at the 5′ end of the first strand.
    • 23. The nucleic acid of statement 22, wherein the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate linkage between each of the three terminal 3′ nucleotides and/or between each of the three terminal 5′ nucleotides on the first strand, and/or between each of the three terminal 3′ nucleotides and/or between each of the three terminal 5′ nucleotides of the second strand when there is no phosphorodithioate linkage present at that end.
    • 24. The nucleic acid of statement 22, wherein all the linkages between the nucleotides of both strands other than the linkage between the two terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end of the first strand and the linkages between the two terminal nucleotides at the 3′ end and at the 5′ end of the second strand are phosphodiester linkages.
    • 25. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 10 to 24 wherein:
    • (a) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (b) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (c) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (d) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (e) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (f) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (g) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (h) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence; or
    • (i) the first strand sequence consists of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 5b, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence.
    • 26. The nucleic acid of statement 25 wherein:
    • (a) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 3 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (b) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 2 nucleotides from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (c) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence differing by no more than 1 nucleotide from the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (d) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 17 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (e) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (f) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (g) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 2 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 18 from the 5′ end of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (h) the first strand sequence comprises a sequence of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (i) the first strand sequence consists of any one of the first strand sequences of Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence;
    • (j) the first strand sequence consists essentially of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence consists essentially of the sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2; or
    • (k) the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2, wherein said first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2, and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2;
    • (l) the first strand sequence consists of a sequence corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 19 from the 5′ end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2,
      • wherein said first strand sequence further consists of 1 (nucleotide 20 counted from the 5′end), 2 (nucleotides 20 and 21), 3 (nucleotides 20, 21 and 22), 4 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22 and 23), 5 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24) or 6 (nucleotides 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25) additional nucleotide(s) at the 3′end of any one of the first strand sequences with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2, and
      • wherein said first strand sequence consists of a contiguous region of from 17-25 nucleotides in length, preferably of from 18-24 nucleotides in length, complementary to the CFB transcript of SEQ ID NO. 758, and
      • optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises or consists essentially of or consists of a sequence of the corresponding second strand sequence with a given SEQ ID No. shown in Table 2;
    • (m) the first strand and the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (1) above are present on a single strand wherein the first strand and the second strand are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length; or
    • (n) the first strand and the second strand of any one of the nucleic acid molecules of subsections (a) to (1) above are on two separate strands that are able to hybridise to each other and to thereby form a double-stranded nucleic acid with a duplex region of 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 nucleotides in length.
    • 27. The nucleic acid of any one of the preceding statements, wherein the nucleic acid is conjugated to a heterologous moiety.
    • 28. The nucleic acid of statement 27, wherein the heterologous moiety comprises (i) one or more N-acetyl galactosamine (GalNAc) moieties or derivatives thereof, and (ii) a linker, wherein the linker conjugates the at least one GalNAc moiety or derivative thereof to the nucleic acid.
    • 29. The nucleic acid of statement 27 or statement 28, wherein the nucleic acid is conjugated to a heterologous moiety comprising a compound of formula (II):





[S—X1—P—X2]3-A-X3—  (II)


wherein:

    • S represents a functional component, e.g., a ligand, such as a saccharide, preferably wherein the saccharide is N-acetyl galactosamine;
    • X1 represents C3-C6 alkylene or (—CH2—CH2—O)m(—CH2)2— wherein m is 1, 2, or 3;
    • P is a phosphate or modified phosphate, preferably a thiophosphate;
    • X2 is alkylene or an alkylene ether of the formula (—CH2)n—O—CH2— where n=1-6;
    • A is a branching unit;
    • X3 represents a bridging unit;
    • wherein a nucleic acid as defined in any of statements 1 to 27 is conjugated to X3 via a phosphate or modified phosphate, preferably a thiophosphate.
    • 30. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 27 to 29, wherein the first strand of the nucleic acid is a compound of formula (V):




embedded image




    • wherein b is 0 or 1; and

    • wherein the second strand is a compound of formula (VI):







embedded image




    • wherein:
      • c and d are independently 0 or 1;
      • Z1 and Z2 are respectively the first and second strand of the nucleic acid;
      • Y is independently O or S;
      • n is independently 0, 1, 2 or 3; and
      • L1 is a linker to which a ligand is attached, wherein L1 is the same or different in formulae (V) and (VI), and is the same or different within formulae (V) and (VI) when L1 is present more than once within the same formula;

    • and wherein b+c+d is 2 or 3.

    • 31. The nucleic acid of any one of statements 27 to 30 which is one of the duplexes shown in Table 5c.

    • 32. A composition comprising a nucleic acid of any of the previous statements and a solvent and/or a delivery vehicle and/or a physiologically acceptable excipient and/or a carrier and/or a salt and/or a diluent and/or a buffer and/or a preservative.

    • 33. A composition comprising a nucleic acid of any one of statements 1 to 31 and a further therapeutic agent selected from the group comprising an oligonucleotide, a small molecule, a monoclonal antibody, a polyclonal antibody and a peptide.

    • 34. A nucleic acid of any one of statements 1 to 31 or a composition of statement 32 or 33 for use as a therapeutic agent.

    • 35. A nucleic acid of any one of statements 1 to 31 or a composition of statement 32 or 33 for use in the prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome.

    • 36. The nucleic acid or composition for use according to statement 35, wherein the disease, disorder or syndrome is a complement-mediated disease, disorder or syndrome.

    • 37. The nucleic acid or composition for use according to statement 35 or 36, wherein the disease, disorder or syndrome is associated with aberrant activation or over-activation of the complement pathway and/or with over-expression or ectopic expression or localisation or accumulation of CFB.

    • 38. The nucleic acid or composition for use according to any one of statements 35 to 37, wherein the disease, disorder or syndrome is:
      • a) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), lupus nephritis, IgA nephropathy (IgA N), myasthenia gravis (MG), primary membranous nephropathy, immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis (IC-mediated GN), post-infectious glomerulonephritis (PIGN), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), ischemia/reperfusion injury, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), dysbiotic periodontal disease, malarial anaemia, neuromyelitis optica, post-HCT/solid organ transplant (TMAs), Guillain-Barré syndrome, membranous glomerulonephritis, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and sepsis;
      • b) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), lupus nephritis, IgA nephropathy (IgA N) and primary membranous nephropathy; c) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), myasthenia gravis (MG), IgA nephropathy (IgA N), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH);
      • d) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), myasthenia gravis (MG), neuromyelitis optica, atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), IgA nephropathy (IgA N), post-HCT/Solid Organ Transplant (TMAs), Guillain-Barré syndrome, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), membranous glomerulonephritis, lupus nephritis and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
      • e) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G) and IgA nephropathy (IgA N); or
      • f) C3 glomerulopathy (C3G).

    • 39. Use of a nucleic acid of any one of statements 1 to 31 or a composition of statement 32 or 33 in the preparation of a medicament for prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome.

    • 40. A method of prophylaxis or treatment of a disease, disorder or syndrome comprising administering a pharmaceutically effective dose of a nucleic acid of any one of statements 1 to 31 or a composition of statement 23 or 33 to an individual in need of treatment, preferably wherein the nucleic acid or composition is administered to the subject subcutaneously, intravenously or by oral, rectal or intraperitoneal administration.












TABLE 4







Summary abbreviations table








Abbreviation
Meaning





mA, mU, mC,
2′-O-Methyl RNA nucleotides


mG



2′-OMe
2′-O-Methyl modification


fA, fU, fC, fG
2′ deoxy-2′-F RNA nucleotides


2′-F
2′-fluoro modification


(ps)
phosphorothioate


(ps2)
phosphorodithioate


(vp)
Vinyl-(E)-phosphonate





(vp)-mU


embedded image







(vp)-mU-phos


embedded image







ivA, ivC, ivU,
inverted RNA (3′-3′) nucleotides


ivG






ST23


embedded image







ST23-phos


embedded image







ST41 (or C4XLT)


embedded image







ST41-phos (or C4XLT- phos)


embedded image







Ser(GN) (when at the end of a chain, one of the O - - - is OH)


embedded image







[ST23 (ps)]3 ST41 (ps)


embedded image







[ST23]3 ST41


embedded image











The abbreviations as shown in the above abbreviation table may be used herein. The list of abbreviations may not be exhaustive and further abbreviations and their meaning may be found throughout this document.


Summary Sequence Tables








TABLE 5a







Unmodified duplexes










Duplex
Strand Name

SEQ


ID
(*)
Sequence (5′→3′)
ID No.













SX001
SX001-A
CUAGACCUGGUCACAUUCC
1





SX001
SX001-B
GGAAUGUGACCAGGUCUAG
2





SX002
SX002-A
UCCAAGCUGAAACUCCAGA
3





SX002
SX002-B
UCUGGAGUUUCAGCUUGGA
4





SX003
SX003-A
UGUCCAAGCUGAAACUCCA
5





SX003
SX003-B
UGGAGUUUCAGCUUGGACA
6





SX004
SX004-A
GUGUCCAAGCUGAAACUCC
7





SX004
SX004-B
GGAGUUUCAGCUUGGACAC
8





SX005
SX005-A
CAAGAUAAAGGGCAUCAGG
9





SX005
SX005-B
CCUGAUGCCCUUUAUCUUG
10





SX006
SX006-A
GUAUUCCCCGUUCUCGAAG
11





SX006
SX006-B
CUUCGAGAACGGGGAAUAC
12





SX007
SX007-A
ACCUUCCUUGUGCCAAUGG
13





SX007
SX007-B
CCAUUGGCACAAGGAAGGU
14





SX008
SX008-A
GAAAGCUUCGGCCACCUCU
15





SX008
SX008-B
AGAGGUGGCCGAAGCUUUC
16





SX009
SX009-A
AUGUUCAUGGAGCCUGAAG
17





SX009
SX009-B
CUUCAGGCUCCAUGAACAU
18





SX010
SX010-A
UAGAUGUUCAUGGAGCCUG
19





SX010
SX010-B
CAGGCUCCAUGAACAUCUA
20





SX011
SX011-A
AUUAAGUUGACUAGACACU
21





SX011
SX011-B
AGUGUCUAGUCAACUUAAU
22





SX012
SX012-A
CAAUUAAGUUGACUAGACA
23





SX012
SX012-B
UGUCUAGUCAACUUAAUUG
24





SX013
SX013-A
CUCAAUUAAGUUGACUAGA
25





SX013
SX013-B
UCUAGUCAACUUAAUUGAG
26





SX014
SX014-A
UUCUCAAUUAAGUUGACUA
27





SX014
SX014-B
UAGUCAACUUAAUUGAGAA
28





SX015
SX015-A
UUCGUGACCCAGUCUGCAU
29





SX015
SX015-B
AUGCAGACUGGGUCACGAA
30





SX016
SX016-A
UCAUGCUGUACACUGCCUG
31





SX016
SX016-B
CAGGCAGUGUACAGCAUGA
32





SX017
SX017-A
UCAUCAAUGACAGUAAUUG
33





SX017
SX017-B
CAAUUACUGUCAUUGAUGA
34





SX018
SX018-A
AAACACAUAGACAUCCAGA
35





SX018
SX018-B
UCUGGAUGUCUAUGUGUUU
36





SX019
SX019-A
AAAGCAUUGAUGUUCACUU
37





SX019
SX019-B
AAGUGAACAUCAAUGCUUU
38





SX020
SX020-A
CUUGACUUUGAACACAUGU
39





SX020
SX020-B
ACAUGUGUUCAAAGUCAAG
40





SX021
SX021-A
GUCAUAAAAUUCAGGAAUU
41





SX021
SX021-B
AAUUCCUGAAUUUUAUGAC
42





SX022
SX022-A
AUAGUCAUAAAAUUCAGGA
43





SX022
SX022-B
UCCUGAAUUUUAUGACUAU
44





SX023
SX023-A
AGACAAAUGGGCCUGAUAG
45





SX023
SX023-B
CUAUCAGGCCCAUUUGUCU
46





SX024
SX024-A
ACACAAACAGAGCUUUGAU
47





SX024
SX024-B
AUCAAAGCUCUGUUUGUGU
48





SX025
SX025-A
GGCAUAUUGAGCAUCUCUC
49





SX025
SX025-B
GAGAGAUGCUCAAUAUGCC
50





SX026
SX026-A
AUGUCCUUGACUUUGUCAU
51





SX026
SX026-B
AUGACAAAGUCAAGGACAU
52





SX027
SX027-A
AAGUAUUGGGGUCAGCAUA
53





SX027
SX027-B
UAUGCUGACCCCAAUACUU
54





SX028
SX028-A
UGAACUAUCAAGGGGCCGC
55





SX028
SX028-B
GCGGCCCCUUGAUAGUUCA
56





SX029
SX029-A
AAUGAAACGACUUCUCUUG
57





SX029
SX029-B
CAAGAGAAGUCGUUUCAUU
58





SX030
SX030-A
UGAAUGAAACGACUUCUCU
59





SX030
SX030-B
AGAGAAGUCGUUUCAUUCA
60





SX031
SX031-A
ACUUGAAUGAAACGACUUC
61





SX031
SX031-B
GAAGUCGUUUCAUUCAAGU
62





SX032
SX032-A
ACCAACUUGAAUGAAACGA
63





SX032
SX032-B
UCGUUUCAUUCAAGUUGGU
64





SX033
SX033-A
UGUGAAAGUCUCGGGCGUG
65





SX033
SX033-B
CACGCCCGAGACUUUCACA
66





SX034
SX034-A
UGUUUUAAUUCAAUCCCAC
67





SX034
SX034-B
GUGGGAUUGAAUUAAAACA
68





SX035
SX035-A
CAGCUGUUUUAAUUCAAUC
69





SX035
SX035-B
GAUUGAAUUAAAACAGCUG
70





SX036
SX036-A
GUUGUCGCAGCUGUUUUAA
71





SX036
SX036-B
UUAAAACAGCUGCGACAAC
72





SX037
SX037-A
CACUAGACCAUAUCUUGGC
73





SX037
SX037-B
GCCAAGAUAUGGUCUAGUG
74





SX038
SX038-A
UGUCACUAGACCAUAUCUU
75





SX038
SX038-B
AAGAUAUGGUCUAGUGACA
76





SX039
SX039-A
UUCUUGGUGUUAGUCCCUG
77





SX039
SX039-B
CAGGGACUAACACCAAGAA
78





SX040
SX040-A
UCAGUCAUGAGGAUGAUGA
79





SX040
SX040-B
UCAUCAUCCUCAUGACUGA
80





SX041
SX041-A
GAUUACACCAACUUGAAUG
81





SX041
SX041-B
CAUUCAAGUUGGUGUAAUC
82





SX042
SX042-A
UUGUAGUAGGGAGACCGGG
83





SX042
SX042-B
CCCGGUCUCCCUACUACAA
84





SX043
SX043-A
UCCAAGAGCCACCUUCCUG
85





SX043
SX043-B
CAGGAAGGUGGCUCUUGGA
86





SX044
SX044-A
UCGUACAUGAAGGAGUCUU
87





SX044
SX044-B
AAGACUCCUUCAUGUACGA
88





SX045
SX045-A
CUCUUGAGGGGUGUCGUAC
89





SX045
SX045-B
GUACGACACCCCUCAAGAG
90





SX046
SX046-A
UUGGCUCCUGUGAAGUUGC
91





SX046
SX046-B
GCAACUUCACAGGAGCCAA
92





SX047
SX047-A
AUAACUUGCCACCUUCUCA
93





SX047
SX047-B
UGAGAAGGUGGCAAGUUAU
94





SX048
SX048-A
AGCCAAAGCAUUGAUGUUC
95





SX048
SX048-B
GAACAUCAAUGCUUUGGCU
96





SX049
SX049-A
GAAGCCAAAGCAUUGAUGU
97





SX049
SX049-B
ACAUCAAUGCUUUGGCUUC
98





SX050
SX050-A
GAACACAUGUUGCUCAUUG
99





SX050
SX050-B
CAAUGAGCAACAUGUGUUC
100





SX051
SX051-A
GCCGCCUUUGAUCUCUACC
101





SX051
SX051-B
GGUAGAGAUCAAAGGCGGC
102





SX052
SX052-A
GAGCCGCCUUUGAUCUCUA
103





SX052
SX052-B
UAGAGAUCAAAGGCGGCUC
104





SX053
SX053-A
AAGGAGCCGCCUUUGAUCU
105





SX053
SX053-B
AGAUCAAAGGCGGCUCCUU
106





SX054
SX054-A
GGAAGGAGCCGCCUUUGAU
107





SX054
SX054-B
AUCAAAGGCGGCUCCUUCC
108





SX055
SX055-A
GGGUAGAAGCCAGAAGGAC
109





SX055
SX055-B
GUCCUUCUGGCUUCUACCC
110





SX056
SX056-A
CAGAGCCCCGGAGAGUGUA
111





SX056
SX056-B
UACACUCUCCGGGGCUCUG
112





SX057
SX057-A
UUGGCAGGUGCGAUUGGCA
113





SX057
SX057-B
UGCCAAUCGCACCUGCCAA
114





SX058
SX058-A
AUUCACUUGGCAGGUGCGA
115





SX058
SX058-B
UCGCACCUGCCAAGUGAAU
116





SX059
SX059-A
CCAUUCACUUGGCAGGUGC
117





SX059
SX059-B
GCACCUGCCAAGUGAAUGG
118





SX060
SX060-A
CCCACCUUCCUUGUGCCAA
119





SX060
SX060-B
UUGGCACAAGGAAGGUGGG
120





SX061
SX061-A
UCUUCAAGGCGGUACUGGC
121





SX061
SX061-B
GCCAGUACCGCCUUGAAGA
122





SX062
SX062-A
GUCUUCAAGGCGGUACUGG
123





SX062
SX062-B
CCAGUACCGCCUUGAAGAC
124





SX063
SX063-A
ACAUGAAGGAGUCUUGGCA
125





SX063
SX063-B
UGCCAAGACUCCUUCAUGU
126





SX064
SX064-A
UUCGGCCACCUCUUGAGGG
127





SX064
SX064-B
CCCUCAAGAGGUGGCCGAA
128





SX065
SX065-A
CUUCUAUGGUCUCUGUCAG
129





SX065
SX065-B
CUGACAGAGACCAUAGAAG
130





SX066
SX066-A
AUCCUCAGCAUCGACUCCU
131





SX066
SX066-B
AGGAGUCGAUGCUGAGGAU
132





SX067
SX067-A
CCCAUCCUCAGCAUCGACU
133





SX067
SX067-B
AGUCGAUGCUGAGGAUGGG
134





SX068
SX068-A
GUGCCCAUCCUCAGCAUCG
135





SX068
SX068-B
CGAUGCUGAGGAUGGGCAC
136





SX069
SX069-A
UAGCACCAGGUAGAUGUUC
137





SX069
SX069-B
GAACAUCUACCUGGUGCUA
138





SX070
SX070-A
UCUAGCACCAGGUAGAUGU
139





SX070
SX070-B
ACAUCUACCUGGUGCUAGA
140





SX071
SX071-A
UCCAUCUAGCACCAGGUAG
141





SX071
SX071-B
CUACCUGGUGCUAGAUGGA
142





SX072
SX072-A
GAUCCAUCUAGCACCAGGU
143





SX072
SX072-B
ACCUGGUGCUAGAUGGAUC
144





SX073
SX073-A
UGAUCCAUCUAGCACCAGG
145





SX073
SX073-B
CCUGGUGCUAGAUGGAUCA
146





SX074
SX074-A
GUCUGAUCCAUCUAGCACC
147





SX074
SX074-B
GGUGCUAGAUGGAUCAGAC
148





SX075
SX075-A
UGUCUGAUCCAUCUAGCAC
149





SX075
SX075-B
GUGCUAGAUGGAUCAGACA
150





SX076
SX076-A
GCUGUCUGAUCCAUCUAGC
151





SX076
SX076-B
GCUAGAUGGAUCAGACAGC
152





SX077
SX077-A
AUGCUGUCUGAUCCAUCUA
153





SX077
SX077-B
UAGAUGGAUCAGACAGCAU
154





SX078
SX078-A
CAAUGCUGUCUGAUCCAUC
155





SX078
SX078-B
GAUGGAUCAGACAGCAUUG
156





SX079
SX079-A
CCAAUGCUGUCUGAUCCAU
157





SX079
SX079-B
AUGGAUCAGACAGCAUUGG
158





SX080
SX080-A
CCUGUGAAGUUGCUGGCCC
159





SX080
SX080-B
GGGCCAGCAACUUCACAGG
160





SX081
SX081-A
UAACUUGCCACCUUCUCAA
161





SX081
SX081-B
UUGAGAAGGUGGCAAGUUA
162





SX082
SX082-A
UGGCAUAUGUCACUAGACC
163





SX082
SX082-B
GGUCUAGUGACAUAUGCCA
164





SX083
SX083-A
UGGUCUUCAUAAUUGAUUU
165





SX083
SX083-B
AAAUCAAUUAUGAAGACCA
166





SX084
SX084-A
GUGGUCUUCAUAAUUGAUU
167





SX084
SX084-B
AAUCAAUUAUGAAGACCAC
168





SX085
SX085-A
UUGUGGUCUUCAUAAUUGA
169





SX085
SX085-B
UCAAUUAUGAAGACCACAA
170





SX086
SX086-A
UCAACUUGUGGUCUUCAUA
171





SX086
SX086-B
UAUGAAGACCACAAGUUGA
172





SX087
SX087-A
CUUCAACUUGUGGUCUUCA
173





SX087
SX087-B
UGAAGACCACAAGUUGAAG
174





SX088
SX088-A
ACUUCAACUUGUGGUCUUC
175





SX088
SX088-B
GAAGACCACAAGUUGAAGU
176





SX089
SX089-A
UGGUGUUAGUCCCUGACUU
177





SX089
SX089-B
AAGUCAGGGACUAACACCA
178





SX090
SX090-A
UCUUGGUGUUAGUCCCUGA
179





SX090
SX090-B
UCAGGGACUAACACCAAGA
180





SX091
SX091-A
AUGAUGACAUGGCGGGUGC
181





SX091
SX091-B
GCACCCGCCAUGUCAUCAU
182





SX092
SX092-A
GGAUGAUGACAUGGCGGGU
183





SX092
SX092-B
ACCCGCCAUGUCAUCAUCC
184





SX093
SX093-A
AGGAUGAUGACAUGGCGGG
185





SX093
SX093-B
CCCGCCAUGUCAUCAUCCU
186





SX094
SX094-A
UGUGCAAUCCAUCAGUCAU
187





SX094
SX094-B
AUGACUGAUGGAUUGCACA
188





SX095
SX095-A
UGUUGUGCAAUCCAUCAGU
189





SX095
SX095-B
ACUGAUGGAUUGCACAACA
190





SX096
SX096-A
CCAUGUUGUGCAAUCCAUC
191





SX096
SX096-B
GAUGGAUUGCACAACAUGG
192





SX097
SX097-A
ACAUCCAGAUAAUCCUCCC
193





SX097
SX097-B
GGGAGGAUUAUCUGGAUGU
194





SX098
SX098-A
ACCCCAAACACAUAGACAU
195





SX098
SX098-B
AUGUCUAUGUGUUUGGGGU
196





SX099
SX099-A
ACACAUGUUGCUCAUUGUC
197





SX099
SX099-B
GACAAUGAGCAACAUGUGU
198





SX100
SX100-A
AUCCUUGACUUUGAACACA
199





SX100
SX100-B
UGUGUUCAAAGUCAAGGAU
200





SX101
SX101-A
AUAUCCUUGACUUUGAACA
201





SX101
SX101-B
UGUUCAAAGUCAAGGAUAU
202





SX102
SX102-A
UUCCAUAUCCUUGACUUUG
203





SX102
SX102-B
CAAAGUCAAGGAUAUGGAA
204





SX103
SX103-A
GUUUUCCAUAUCCUUGACU
205





SX103
SX103-B
AGUCAAGGAUAUGGAAAAC
206





SX104
SX104-A
AGGUUUUCCAUAUCCUUGA
207





SX104
SX104-B
UCAAGGAUAUGGAAAACCU
208





SX105
SX105-A
AUCAUUUGGUAGAAAACAU
209





SX105
SX105-B
AUGUUUUCUACCAAAUGAU
210





SX106
SX106-A
GAUCAUUUGGUAGAAAACA
211





SX106
SX106-B
UGUUUUCUACCAAAUGAUC
212





SX107
SX107-A
UCAUCGAUCAUUUGGUAGA
213





SX107
SX107-B
UCUACCAAAUGAUCGAUGA
214





SX108
SX108-A
AUGCCACAGAGACUCAGAG
215





SX108
SX108-B
CUCUGAGUCUCUGUGGCAU
216





SX109
SX109-A
ACCAUGCCACAGAGACUCA
217





SX109
SX109-B
UGAGUCUCUGUGGCAUGGU
218





SX110
SX110-A
AACCAUGCCACAGAGACUC
219





SX110
SX110-B
GAGUCUCUGUGGCAUGGUU
220





SX111
SX111-A
CAAACCAUGCCACAGAGAC
221





SX111
SX111-B
GUCUCUGUGGCAUGGUUUG
222





SX112
SX112-A
UCCCAAACCAUGCCACAGA
223





SX112
SX112-B
UCUGUGGCAUGGUUUGGGA
224





SX113
SX113-A
UCUUGGCCUGCCAUGGUUG
225





SX113
SX113-B
CAACCAUGGCAGGCCAAGA
226





SX114
SX114-A
AGAUCUUGGCCUGCCAUGG
227





SX114
SX114-B
CCAUGGCAGGCCAAGAUCU
228





SX115
SX115-A
UGAGAUCUUGGCCUGCCAU
229





SX115
SX115-B
AUGGCAGGCCAAGAUCUCA
230





SX116
SX116-A
ACUGAGAUCUUGGCCUGCC
231





SX116
SX116-B
GGCAGGCCAAGAUCUCAGU
232





SX117
SX117-A
CGAAUGACUGAGAUCUUGG
233





SX117
SX117-B
CCAAGAUCUCAGUCAUUCG
234





SX118
SX118-A
GGGCGAAUGACUGAGAUCU
235





SX118
SX118-B
AGAUCUCAGUCAUUCGCCC
236





SX119
SX119-A
CAAAGUACUCAGACACCAC
237





SX119
SX119-B
GUGGUGUCUGAGUACUUUG
238





SX120
SX120-A
ACAAAGUACUCAGACACCA
239





SX120
SX120-B
UGGUGUCUGAGUACUUUGU
240





SX121
SX121-A
GCACAAAGUACUCAGACAC
241





SX121
SX121-B
GUGUCUGAGUACUUUGUGC
242





SX122
SX122-A
CAGCACAAAGUACUCAGAC
243





SX122
SX122-B
GUCUGAGUACUUUGUGCUG
244





SX123
SX123-A
AUGGGCCUGAUAGUCUGGC
245





SX123
SX123-B
GCCAGACUAUCAGGCCCAU
246





SX124
SX124-A
GUGCAGGGGAGACAAAUGG
247





SX124
SX124-B
CCAUUUGUCUCCCCUGCAC
248





SX125
SX125-A
AAACAGAGCUUUGAUAUCC
249





SX125
SX125-B
GGAUAUCAAAGCUCUGUUU
250





SX126
SX126-A
ACAAACAGAGCUUUGAUAU
251





SX126
SX126-B
AUAUCAAAGCUCUGUUUGU
252





SX127
SX127-A
GACACAAACAGAGCUUUGA
253





SX127
SX127-B
UCAAAGCUCUGUUUGUGUC
254





SX128
SX128-A
AUGUAGACCUCCUUCCGAG
255





SX128
SX128-B
CUCGGAAGGAGGUCUACAU
256





SX129
SX129-A
GAUGUAGACCUCCUUCCGA
257





SX129
SX129-B
UCGGAAGGAGGUCUACAUC
258





SX130
SX130-A
UCUUGAUGUAGACCUCCUU
259





SX130
SX130-B
AAGGAGGUCUACAUCAAGA
260





SX131
SX131-A
AUUCUUGAUGUAGACCUCC
261





SX131
SX131-B
GGAGGUCUACAUCAAGAAU
262





SX132
SX132-A
CCCAUUCUUGAUGUAGACC
263





SX132
SX132-B
GGUCUACAUCAAGAAUGGG
264





SX133
SX133-A
UCCCCAUUCUUGAUGUAGA
265





SX133
SX133-B
UCUACAUCAAGAAUGGGGA
266





SX134
SX134-A
CUUAUCCCCAUUCUUGAUG
267





SX134
SX134-B
CAUCAAGAAUGGGGAUAAG
268





SX135
SX135-A
AUUGGGGUCAGCAUAGGGA
269





SX135
SX135-B
UCCCUAUGCUGACCCCAAU
270





SX136
SX136-A
GUAUUGGGGUCAGCAUAGG
271





SX136
SX136-B
CCUAUGCUGACCCCAAUAC
272





SX137
SX137-A
UACACCAACUUGAAUGAAA
273





SX137
SX137-B
UUUCAUUCAAGUUGGUGUA
274





SX138
SX138-A
UCCACUACUCCCCAGCUGA
275





SX138
SX138-B
UCAGCUGGGGAGUAGUGGA
276





SX139
SX139-A
ACAUCCACUACUCCCCAGC
277





SX139
SX139-B
GCUGGGGAGUAGUGGAUGU
278





SX140
SX140-A
GCAGACAUCCACUACUCCC
279





SX140
SX140-B
GGGAGUAGUGGAUGUCUGC
280





SX141
SX141-A
UUUGCAGACAUCCACUACU
281





SX141
SX141-B
AGUAGUGGAUGUCUGCAAA
282





SX142
SX142-A
ACCCAAAUCCUCAUCUUGG
283





SX142
SX142-B
CCAAGAUGAGGAUUUGGGU
284





SX143
SX143-A
AACCCAAAUCCUCAUCUUG
285





SX143
SX143-B
CAAGAUGAGGAUUUGGGUU
286





SX144
SX144-A
AAACCCAAAUCCUCAUCUU
287





SX144
SX144-B
AAGAUGAGGAUUUGGGUUU
288





SX145
SX145-A
AAAACCCAAAUCCUCAUCU
289





SX145
SX145-B
AGAUGAGGAUUUGGGUUUU
290





SX146
SX146-A
GAAAACCCAAAUCCUCAUC
291





SX146
SX146-B
GAUGAGGAUUUGGGUUUUC
292





SX147
SX147-A
UAGAAAACCCAAAUCCUCA
293





SX147
SX147-B
UGAGGAUUUGGGUUUUCUA
294





SX148
SX148-A
UUAUAGAAAACCCAAAUCC
295





SX148
SX148-B
GGAUUUGGGUUUUCUAUAA
296





SX149
SX149-A
UUGGAGAAGUCGGAAGGAG
297





SX149
SX149-B
CUCCUUCCGACUUCUCCAA
298





SX150
SX150-A
GUCUGCACAGGGUACGGGU
299





SX150
SX150-B
ACCCGUACCCUGUGCAGAC
300





SX151
SX151-A
UACAUGAAGGAGUCUUGGC
301





SX151
SX151-B
GCCAAGACUCCUUCAUGUA
302





SX152
SX152-A
GUGUUAGUCCCUGACUUCA
303





SX152
SX152-B
UGAAGUCAGGGACUAACAC
304





SX153
SX153-A
CCCAUGUUGUGCAAUCCAU
305





SX153
SX153-B
AUGGAUUGCACAACAUGGG
306





SX154
SX154-A
AUCUUGGCCUGCCAUGGUU
307





SX154
SX154-B
AACCAUGGCAGGCCAAGAU
308





SX155
SX155-A
GAGAUCUUGGCCUGCCAUG
309





SX155
SX155-B
CAUGGCAGGCCAAGAUCUC
310





SX156
SX156-A
AGACACAAACAGAGCUUUG
311





SX156
SX156-B
CAAAGCUCUGUUUGUGUCU
312





SX157
SX157-A
UAUUGGGGUCAGCAUAGGG
313





SX157
SX157-B
CCCUAUGCUGACCCCAAUA
314





SX158
SX158-A
UACGUGUCUGCACAGGGUA
315





SX158
SX158-B
UACCCUGUGCAGACACGUA
316





SX159
SX159-A
GUGGAAAGAGAUCUCAUCA
317





SX159
SX159-B
UGAUGAGAUCUCUUUCCAC
318





SX160
SX160-A
ACCGUCAUAGCAGUGGAAA
319





SX160
SX160-B
UUUCCACUGCUAUGACGGU
320





SX161
SX161-A
UGGUAGGUGACGCUGUCUU
321





SX161
SX161-B
AAGACAGCGUCACCUACCA
322





SX162
SX162-A
ACCUUCCUGACACGUUCGC
323





SX162
SX162-B
GCGAACGUGUCAGGAAGGU
324





SX163
SX163-A
AGCAUCGACUCCUUCUAUG
325





SX163
SX163-B
CAUAGAAGGAGUCGAUGCU
326





SX164
SX164-A
ACCAUAACUUGCCACCUUC
327





SX164
SX164-B
GAAGGUGGCAAGUUAUGGU
328





SX165
SX165-A
AUGACAUGGCGGGUGCGGU
329





SX165
SX165-B
ACCGCACCCGCCAUGUCAU
330





SX166
SX166-A
GACAGUAAUUGGGUCCCCG
331





SX166
SX166-B
CGGGGACCCAAUUACUGUC
332





SX167
SX167-A
AACACAUAGACAUCCAGAU
333





SX167
SX167-B
AUCUGGAUGUCUAUGUGUU
334





SX168
SX168-A
GCAUUGAUGUUCACUUGGU
335





SX168
SX168-B
ACCAAGUGAACAUCAAUGC
336





SX169
SX169-A
CACAUGUUGCUCAUUGUCU
337





SX169
SX169-B
AGACAAUGAGCAACAUGUG
338





SX170
SX170-A
AGACUCAGAGACUGGCUUU
339





SX170
SX170-B
AAAGCCAGUCUCUGAGUCU
340





SX171
SX171-A
GUGUUCCCAAACCAUGCCA
341





SX171
SX171-B
UGGCAUGGUUUGGGAACAC
342





SX172
SX172-A
GUUGCUUGUGGUAAUCGGU
343





SX172
SX172-B
ACCGAUUACCACAAGCAAC
344





SX173
SX173-A
AACGUCAUAGUCAUAAAAU
345





SX173
SX173-B
AUUUUAUGACUAUGACGUU
346





SX174
SX174-A
ACAAAUGGGCCUGAUAGUC
347





SX174
SX174-B
GACUAUCAGGCCCAUUUGU
348





SX175
SX175-A
UCAAAGCUCGAGUUGUUCC
349





SX175
SX175-B
GGAACAACUCGAGCUUUGA
350





SX176
SX176-A
UGUUGCUGGCAAGUGGUAG
351





SX176
SX176-B
CUACCACUUGCCAGCAACA
352





SX177
SX177-A
AUAGCCUGGGGCAUAUUGA
353





SX177
SX177-B
UCAAUAUGCCCCAGGCUAU
354





SX178
SX178-A
UACAAAGGAACCGAGGGGU
355





SX178
SX178-B
ACCCCUCGGUUCCUUUGUA
356





SX179
SX179-A
CUUUUGCCGCUUCUGGUUU
357





SX179
SX179-B
AAACCAGAAGCGGCAAAAG
358





SX180
SX180-A
GUCUUGGCAGGAAGGCUCC
359





SX180
SX180-B
GGAGCCUUCCUGCCAAGAC
360





SX181
SX181-A
UCACAAACAGAGCUUUGAU
721





SX181
SX024-B
AUCAAAGCUCUGUUUGUGU
48





SX182
SX182-A
UUAUCCUUGACUUUGAACA
722





SX182
SX101-B
UGUUCAAAGUCAAGGAUAU
202





SX183
SX183-A
UUUGUCGCAGCUGUUUUAA
723





SX183
SX036-B
UUAAAACAGCUGCGACAAC
72





SX184
SX184-A
UAUGAAACGACUUCUCUUG
724





SX184
SX029-B
CAAGAGAAGUCGUUUCAUU
58









The duplexes listed in Table 5b have various modifications as shown, with reference to Table 4 for an explanation of the abbreviations used. Where appropriate, the sequence of the equivalent unmodified strand from Table 5a is also indicated.









TABLE 5b







Modified duplexes















Unmod-






ified






equi-



Strand

SEQ
valent


Duplex
Name

ID
SEQ


ID
(*)
Sequence (5′−>3′)
No.
ID No.





EV2001
EV2001-A
mC (ps) fU (ps) mA fG mA fC mC fU mG fG mU fC mA fC mA fU mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
361
  1





EV2001
EV2001-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mA mA mU mG fU fG fA mC mC mA mG mG mU mC mU (ps) mA (ps) mG
362
  2





EV2002
EV2002-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mA fG mC fU mG fA mA fA mC fU mC fC mA (ps) fG (ps) mA
363
  3





EV2002
EV2002-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mU mG mG mA fG fU fU mU mC mA mG mC mU mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mA
364
  4





EV2003
EV2003-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mU fC mC fA mA fG mC fU mG fA mA fA mC fU mC (ps) fC (ps) mA
365
  5





EV2003
EV2003-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mG mA mG mU fU fU fC mA mG mC mU mU mG mG mA (ps) mC (ps) mA
366
  6





EV2004
EV2004-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mG fU mC fC mA fA mG fC mU fG mA fA mA fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
367
  7





EV2004
EV2004-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mA mG mU mU fU fC fA mG mC mU mU mG mG mA mC (ps) mA (ps) mC
368
  8





EV2005
EV2005-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mA fG mA fU mA fA mA fG mG fG mC fA mU fC mA (ps) fG (ps) mG
369
  9





EV2005
EV2005-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mU mG mA mU fG fC fC mC mU mU mU mA mU mC mU (ps) mU (ps) mG
370
 10





EV2006
EV2006-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mA fU mU fC mC fC mC fG mU fU mC fU mC fG mA (ps) fA (ps) mG
371
 11





EV2006
EV2006-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mU mC mG mA fG fA fA mC mG mG mG mG mA mA mU (ps) mA (ps) mC
372
 12





EV2007
EV2007-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fU mU fC mC fU mU fG mU fG mC fC mA fA mU (ps) fG (ps) mG
373
 13





EV2007
EV2007-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mA mU mU mG fG fC fA mC mA mA mG mG mA mA mG (ps) mG (ps) mU
374
 14





EV2008
EV2008-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mA fA mG fC mU fU mC fG mG fC mC fA mC fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mU
375
 15





EV2008
EV2008-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mA mG mG mU fG fG fC mC mG mA mA mG mC mU mU (ps) mU (ps) mC
376
 16





EV2009
EV2009-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fU mU fC mA fU mG fG mA fG mC fC mU fG mA (ps) fA (ps) mG
377
 17





EV2009
EV2009-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mU mC mA mG fG fC fU mC mC mA mU mG mA mA mC (ps) mA (ps) mU
378
 18





EV2010
EV2010-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mG fA mU fG mU fU mC fA mU fG mG fA mG fC mC (ps) fU (ps) mG
379
 19





EV2010
EV2010-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mG mG mC mU fC fC fA mU mG mA mA mC mA mU mC (ps) mU (ps) mA
380
 20





EV2011
EV2011-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mU fA mA fG mU fU mG fA mC fU mA fG mA fC mA (ps) fC (ps) mU
381
 21





EV2011
EV2011-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mU mG mU mC fU fA fG mU mC mA mA mC mU mU mA (ps) mA (ps) mU
382
 22





EV2012
EV2012-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mA fU mU fA mA fG mU fU mG fA mC fU mA fG mA (ps) fC (ps) mA
383
 23





EV2012
EV2012-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mU mC mU mA fG fU fC mA mA mC mU mU mA mA mU (ps) mU (ps) mG
384
 24





EV2013
EV2013-A
mC (ps) fU (ps) mC fA mA fU mU fA mA fG mU fU mG fA mC fU mA (ps) fG (ps) mA
385
 25





EV2013
EV2013-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mU mA mG mU fC fA fA mC mU mU mA mA mU mU mG (ps) mA (ps) mG
386
 26





EV2014
EV2014-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mC fU mC fA mA fU mU fA mA fG mU fU mG fA mC (ps) fU (ps) mA
387
 27





EV2014
EV2014-B
mU (ps) mA (ps) mG mU mC mA fA fC fU mU mA mA mU mU mG mA mG (ps) mA (ps) mA
388
 28





EV2015
EV2015-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mC fG mU fG mA fC mC fC mA fG mU fC mU fG mC (ps) fA (ps) mU
389
 29





EV2015
EV2015-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mG mC mA mG fA fC fU mG mG mG mU mC mA mC mG (ps) mA (ps) mA
390
 30





EV2016
EV2016-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mG fC mU fG mU fA mC fA mC fU mG fC mC (ps) fU (ps) mG
391
 31





EV2016
EV2016-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mG mG mC mA fG fU fG mU mA mC mA mG mC mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mA
392
 32





EV2017
EV2017-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mC fA mA fU mG fA mC fA mG fU mA fA mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
393
 33





EV2017
EV2017-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mA mU mU mA fC fU fG mU mC mA mU mU mG mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mA
394
 34





EV2018
EV2018-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mA fC mA fC mA fU mA fG mA fC mA fU mC fC mA (ps) fG (ps) mA
395
 35





EV2018
EV2018-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mU mG mG mA fU fG fU mC mU mA mU mG mU mG mU (ps) mU (ps) mU
396
 36





EV2019
EV2019-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mA fG mC fA mU fU mG fA mU fG mU fU mC fA mC (ps) fU (ps) mU
397
 37





EV2019
EV2019-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mG mU mG mA fA fC fA mU mC mA mA mU mG mC mU (ps) mU (ps) mU
398
 38





EV2020
EV2020-A
mC (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mA fC mU fU mU fG mA fA mC fA mC fA mU (ps) fG (ps) mU
399
 39





EV2020
EV2020-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mA mU mG mU fG fU fU mC mA mA mA mG mU mC mA (ps) mA (ps) mG
400
 40





EV2021
EV2021-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mC fA mU fA mA fA mA fU mU fC mA fG mG fA mA (ps) fU (ps) mU
401
 41





EV2021
EV2021-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mU mU mC mC fU fG fA mA mU mU mU mU mA mU mG (ps) mA (ps) mC
402
 42





EV2022
EV2022-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mA fG mU fC mA fU mA fA mA fA mU fU mC fA mG (ps) fG (ps) mA
403
 43





EV2022
EV2022-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mC mU mG mA fA fU fU mU mU mA mU mG mA mC mU (ps) mA (ps) mU
404
 44





EV2023
EV2023-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mA fC mA fA mA fU mG fG mG fC mC fU mG fA mU (ps) fA (ps) mG
405
 45





EV2023
EV2023-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mA mU mC mA fG fG fC mC mC mA mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mC (ps) mU
406
 46





EV2024
EV2024-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU
407
 47





EV2024
EV2024-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mC mA mA mA fG fC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
408
 48





EV2025
EV2025-A
mG (ps) fG (ps) mC fA mU fA mU fU mG fA mG fC mA fU mC fU mC (ps) fU (ps) mC
409
 49





EV2025
EV2025-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mG mA mG mA fU fG fC mU mC mA mA mU mA mU mG (ps) mC (ps) mC
410
 50





EV2026
EV2026-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fU mC (ps) fA (ps) mU
411
 51





EV2026
EV2026-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mG mA mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mC (ps) mA (ps) mU
412
 52





EV2027
EV2027-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mG fU mA fU mU fG mG fG mG fU mC fA mG fC mA (ps) fU (ps) mA
413
 53





EV2027
EV2027-B
mU (ps) mA (ps) mU mG mC mU fG fA fC mC mC mC mA mA mU mA mC (ps) mU (ps) mU
414
 54





EV2028
EV2028-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mA fA mC fU mA fU mC fA mA fG mG fG mG fC mC (ps) fG (ps) mC
415
 55





EV2028
EV2028-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mG mG mC mC fC fC fU mU mG mA mU mA mG mU mU (ps) mC (ps) mA
416
 56





EV2029
EV2029-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mU fG mA fA mA fC mG fA mC fU mU fC mU fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
417
 57





EV2029
EV2029-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mA mG mA mG fA fA fG mU mC mG mU mU mU mC mA (ps) mU (ps) mU
418
 58





EV2030
EV2030-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mA fA mU fG mA fA mA fC mG fA mC fU mU fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mU
419
 59





EV2030
EV2030-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mA mG mA mA fG fU fC mG mU mU mU mC mA mU mU (ps) mC (ps) mA
420
 60





EV2031
EV2031-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mU fU mG fA mA fU mG fA mA fA mC fG mA fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mC
421
 61





EV2031
EV2031-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mA mG mU mC fG fU fU mU mC mA mU mU mC mA mA (ps) mG (ps) mU
422
 62





EV2032
EV2032-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mA fC mU fU mG fA mA fU mG fA mA fA mC (ps) fG (ps) mA
423
 63





EV2032
EV2032-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mG mU mU mU fC fA fU mU mC mA mA mG mU mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mU
424
 64





EV2033
EV2033-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mU fG mA fA mA fG mU fC mU fC mG fG mG fC mG (ps) fU (ps) mG
425
 65





EV2033
EV2033-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mC mG mC mC fC fG fA mG mA mC mU mU mU mC mA (ps) mC (ps) mA
426
 66





EV2034
EV2034-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mU fU mU fU mA fA mU fU mC fA mA fU mC fC mC (ps) fA (ps) mC
427
 67





EV2034
EV2034-B
mG (ps) mU (ps) mG mG mG mA fU fU fG mA mA mU mU mA mA mA mA (ps) mC (ps) mA
428
 68





EV2035
EV2035-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mG fC mU fG mU fU mU fU mA fA mU fU mC fA mA (ps) fU (ps) mC
429
 69





EV2035
EV2035-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mU mU mG mA fA fU fU mA mA mA mA mC mA mG mC (ps) mU (ps) mG
430
 70





EV2036
EV2036-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mU fC mG fC mA fG mC fU mG fU mU fU mU (ps) fA (ps) mA
431
 71





EV2036
EV2036-B
mU (ps) mU (ps) mA mA mA mA fC fA fG mC mU mG mC mG mA mC mA (ps) mA (ps) mC
432
 72





EV2037
EV2037-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mC fU mA fG mA fC mC fA mU fA mU fC mU fU mG (ps) fG (ps) mC
433
 73





EV2037
EV2037-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mC mA mA mG fA fU fA mU mG mG mU mC mU mA mG (ps) mU (ps) mG
434
 74





EV2038
EV2038-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mU fC mA fC mU fA mG fA mC fC mA fU mA fU mC (ps) fU (ps) mU
435
 75





EV2038
EV2038-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mG mA mU mA fU fG fG mU mC mU mA mG mU mG mA (ps) mC (ps) mA
436
 76





EV2039
EV2039-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mC fU mU fG mG fU mG fU mU fA mG fU mC fC mC (ps) fU (ps) mG
437
 77





EV2039
EV2039-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mG mG mG mA fC fU fA mA mC mA mC mC mA mA mG (ps) mA (ps) mA
438
 78





EV2040
EV2040-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mA fG mU fC mA fU mG fA mG fG mA fU mG fA mU (ps) fG (ps) mA
439
 79





EV2040
EV2040-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mA mU mC mA fU fC fC mU mC mA mU mG mA mC mU (ps) mG (ps) mA
440
 80





EV2041
EV2041-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mU fU mA fC mA fC mC fA mA fC mU fU mG fA mA (ps) fU (ps) mG
441
 81





EV2041
EV2041-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mU mU mC mA fA fG fU mU mG mG mU mG mU mA mA (ps) mU (ps) mC
442
 82





EV2042
EV2042-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mG fU mA fG mU fA mG fG mG fA mG fA mC fC mG (ps) fG (ps) mG
443
 83





EV2042
EV2042-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mC mG mG mU fC fU fC mC mC mU mA mC mU mA mC (ps) mA (ps) mA
444
 84





EV2043
EV2043-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mA fG mA fG mC fC mA fC mC fU mU fC mC (ps) fU (ps) mG
445
 85





EV2043
EV2043-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mG mG mA mA fG fG fU mG mG mC mU mC mU mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mA
446
 86





EV2044
EV2044-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mG fU mA fC mA fU mG fA mA fG mG fA mG fU mC (ps) fU (ps) mU
447
 87





EV2044
EV2044-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mG mA mC mU fC fC fU mU mC mA mU mG mU mA mC (ps) mG (ps) mA
448
 88





EV2045
EV2045-A
mC (ps) fU (ps) mC fU mU fG mA fG mG fG mG fU mG fU mC fG mU (ps) fA (ps) mC
449
 89





EV2045
EV2045-B
mG (ps) mU (ps) mA mC mG mA fC fA fC mC mC mC mU mC mA mA mG (ps) mA (ps) mG
450
 90





EV2046
EV2046-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mG fG mC fU mC fC mU fG mU fG mA fA mG fU mU (ps) fG (ps) mC
451
 91





EV2046
EV2046-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mA mA mC mU fU fC fA mC mA mG mG mA mG mC mC (ps) mA (ps) mA
452
 92





EV2047
EV2047-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mA fA mC fU mU fG mC fC mA fC mC fU mU fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mA
453
 93





EV2047
EV2047-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mA mG mA mA fG fG fU mG mG mC mA mA mG mU mU (ps) mA (ps) mU
454
 94





EV2048
EV2048-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mC fC mA fA mA fG mC fA mU fU mG fA mU fG mU (ps) fU (ps) mC
455
 95





EV2048
EV2048-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mA mC mA mU fC fA fA mU mG mC mU mU mU mG mG (ps) mC (ps) mU
456
 96





EV2049
EV2049-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mA fG mC fC mA fA mA fG mC fA mU fU mG fA mU (ps) fG (ps) mU
457
 97





EV2049
EV2049-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mA mU mC mA fA fU fG mC mU mU mU mG mG mC mU (ps) mU (ps) mC
458
 98





EV2050
EV2050-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mA fC mA fC mA fU mG fU mU fG mC fU mC fA mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
459
 99





EV2050
EV2050-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mA mU mG mA fG fC fA mA mC mA mU mG mU mG mU (ps) mU (ps) mC
460
100





EV2051
EV2051-A
mG (ps) fC (ps) mC fG mC fC mU fU mU fG mA fU mC fU mC fU mA (ps) fC (ps) mC
461
101





EV2051
EV2051-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mU mA mG mA fG fA fU mC mA mA mA mG mG mC mG (ps) mG (ps) mC
462
102





EV2052
EV2052-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mG fC mC fG mC fC mU fU mU fG mA fU mC fU mC (ps) fU (ps) mA
463
103





EV2052
EV2052-B
mU (ps) mA (ps) mG mA mG mA fU fC fA mA mA mG mG mC mG mG mC (ps) mU (ps) mC
464
104





EV2053
EV2053-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mG fG mA fG mC fC mG fC mC fU mU fU mG fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mU
465
105





EV2053
EV2053-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mA mU mC mA fA fA fG mG mC mG mG mC mU mC mC (ps) mU (ps) mU
466
106





EV2054
EV2054-A
mG (ps) fG (ps) mA fA mG fG mA fG mC fC mG fC mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU
467
107





EV2054
EV2054-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mC mA mA mA fG fG fC mG mG mC mU mC mC mU mU (ps) mC (ps) mC
468
108





EV2055
EV2055-A
mG (ps) fG (ps) mG fU mA fG mA fA mG fC mC fA mG fA mA fG mG (ps) fA (ps) mC
469
109





EV2055
EV2055-B
mG (ps) mU (ps) mC mC mU mU fC fU fG mG mC mU mU mC mU mA mC (ps) mC (ps) mC
470
110





EV2056
EV2056-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mG fA mG fC mC fC mC fG mG fA mG fA mG fU mG (ps) fU (ps) mA
471
111





EV2056
EV2056-B
mU (ps) mA (ps) mC mA mC mU fC fU fC mC mG mG mG mG mC mU mC (ps) mU (ps) mG
472
112





EV2057
EV2057-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mG fG mC fA mG fG mU fG mC fG mA fU mU fG mG (ps) fC (ps) mA
473
113





EV2057
EV2057-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mC mC mA mA fU fC fG mC mA mC mC mU mG mC mC (ps) mA (ps) mA
474
114





EV2058
EV2058-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mU fC mA fC mU fU mG fG mC fA mG fG mU fG mC (ps) fG (ps) mA
475
115





EV2058
EV2058-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mG mC mA mC fC fU fG mC mC mA mA mG mU mG mA (ps) mA (ps) mU
476
116





EV2059
EV2059-A
mC (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mU fC mA fC mU fU mG fG mC fA mG fG mU (ps) fG (ps) mC
477
117





EV2059
EV2059-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mA mC mC mU fG fC fC mA mA mG mU mG mA mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mG
478
118





EV2060
EV2060-A
mC (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mC fC mU fU mC fC mU fU mG fU mG fC mC (ps) fA (ps) mA
479
119





EV2060
EV2060-B
mU (ps) mU (ps) mG mG mC mA fC fA fA mG mG mA mA mG mG mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mG
480
120





EV2061
EV2061-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mU fU mC fA mA fG mG fC mG fG mU fA mC fU mG (ps) fG (ps) mC
481
121





EV2061
EV2061-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mC mA mG mU fA fC fC mG mC mC mU mU mG mA mA (ps) mG (ps) mA
482
122





EV2062
EV2062-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mC fU mU fC mA fA mG fG mC fG mG fU mA fC mU (ps) fG (ps) mG
483
123





EV2062
EV2062-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mA mG mU mA fC fC fG mC mC mU mU mG mA mA mG (ps) mA (ps) mC
484
124





EV2063
EV2063-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mG fA mA fG mG fA mG fU mC fU mU fG mG (ps) fC (ps) mA
485
125





EV2063
EV2063-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mC mC mA mA fG fA fC mU mC mC mU mU mC mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
486
126





EV2064
EV2064-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mC fG mG fC mC fA mC fC mU fC mU fU mG fA mG (ps) fG (ps) mG
487
127





EV2064
EV2064-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mC mU mC mA fA fG fA mG mG mU mG mG mC mC mG (ps) mA (ps) mA
488
128





EV2065
EV2065-A
mC (ps) fU (ps) mU fC mU fA mU fG mG fU mC fU mC fU mG fU mC (ps) fA (ps) mG
489
129





EV2065
EV2065-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mG mA mC mA fG fA fG mA mC mC mA mU mA mG mA (ps) mA (ps) mG
490
130





EV2066
EV2066-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mC fC mU fC mA fG mC fA mU fC mG fA mC fU mC (ps) fC (ps) mU
491
131





EV2066
EV2066-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mG mA mG mU fC fG fA mU mG mC mU mG mA mG mG (ps) mA (ps) mU
492
132





EV2067
EV2067-A
mC (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mU fC mC fU mC fA mG fC mA fU mC fG mA (ps) fC (ps) mU
493
133





EV2067
EV2067-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mU mC mG mA fU fG fC mU mG mA mG mG mA mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mG
494
134





EV2068
EV2068-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mG fC mC fC mA fU mC fC mU fC mA fG mC fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mG
495
135





EV2068
EV2068-B
mC (ps) mG (ps) mA mU mG mC fU fG fA mG mG mA mU mG mG mG mC (ps) mA (ps) mC
496
136





EV2069
EV2069-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mG fC mA fC mC fA mG fG mU fA mG fA mU fG mU (ps) fU (ps) mC
497
137





EV2069
EV2069-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mA mC mA mU fC fU fA mC mC mU mG mG mU mG mC (ps) mU (ps) mA
498
138





EV2070
EV2070-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mU fA mG fC mA fC mC fA mG fG mU fA mG fA mU (ps) fG (ps) mU
499
139





EV2070
EV2070-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mA mU mC mU fA fC fC mU mG mG mU mG mC mU mA (ps) mG (ps) mA
500
140





EV2071
EV2071-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mU fC mU fA mG fC mA fC mC fA mG fG mU (ps) fA (ps) mG
501
141





EV2071
EV2071-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mA mC mC mU fG fG fU mG mC mU mA mG mA mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mA
502
142





EV2072
EV2072-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mU fC mC fA mU fC mU fA mG fC mA fC mC fA mG (ps) fG (ps) mU
503
143





EV2072
EV2072-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mC mU mG mG fU fG fC mU mA mG mA mU mG mG mA (ps) mU (ps) mC
504
144





EV2073
EV2073-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mA fU mC fC mA fU mC fU mA fG mC fA mC fC mA (ps) fG (ps) mG
505
145





EV2073
EV2073-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mU mG mG mU fG fC fU mA mG mA mU mG mG mA mU (ps) mC (ps) mA
506
146





EV2074
EV2074-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mC fU mG fA mU fC mC fA mU fC mU fA mG fC mA (ps) fC (ps) mC
507
147





EV2074
EV2074-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mU mG mC mU fA fG fA mU mG mG mA mU mC mA mG (ps) mA (ps) mC
508
148





EV2075
EV2075-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mU fC mU fG mA fU mC fC mA fU mC fU mA fG mC (ps) fA (ps) mC
509
149





EV2075
EV2075-B
mG (ps) mU (ps) mG mC mU mA fG fA fU mG mG mA mU mC mA mG mA (ps) mC (ps) mA
510
150





EV2076
EV2076-A
mG (ps) fC (ps) mU fG mU fC mU fG mA fU mC fC mA fU mC fU mA (ps) fG (ps) mC
511
151





EV2076
EV2076-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mU mA mG mA fU fG fG mA mU mC mA mG mA mC mA (ps) mG (ps) mC
512
152





EV2077
EV2077-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fC mU fG mU fC mU fG mA fU mC fC mA fU mC (ps) fU (ps) mA
513
153





EV2077
EV2077-B
mU (ps) mA (ps) mG mA mU mG fG fA fU mC mA mG mA mC mA mG mC (ps) mA (ps) mU
514
154





EV2078
EV2078-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mA fU mG fC mU fG mU fC mU fG mA fU mC fC mA (ps) fU (ps) mC
515
155





EV2078
EV2078-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mU mG mG mA fU fC fA mG mA mC mA mG mC mA mU (ps) mU (ps) mG
516
156





EV2079
EV2079-A
mC (ps) fC (ps) mA fA mU fG mC fU mG fU mC fU mG fA mU fC mC (ps) fA (ps) mU
517
157





EV2079
EV2079-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mG mG mA mU fC fA fG mA mC mA mG mC mA mU mU (ps) mG (ps) mG
518
158





EV2080
EV2080-A
mC (ps) fC (ps) mU fG mU fG mA fA mG fU mU fG mC fU mG fG mC (ps) fC (ps) mC
519
159





EV2080
EV2080-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mG mC mC mA fG fC fA mA mC mU mU mC mA mC mA (ps) mG (ps) mG
520
160





EV2081
EV2081-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mA fC mU fU mG fC mC fA mC fC mU fU mC fU mC (ps) fA (ps) mA
521
161





EV2081
EV2081-B
mU (ps) mU (ps) mG mA mG mA fA fG fG mU mG mG mC mA mA mG mU (ps) mU (ps) mA
522
162





EV2082
EV2082-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mG fC mA fU mA fU mG fU mC fA mC fU mA fG mA (ps) fC (ps) mC
523
163





EV2082
EV2082-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mU mC mU mA fG fU fG mA mC mA mU mA mU mG mC (ps) mC (ps) mA
524
164





EV2083
EV2083-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mG fU mC fU mU fC mA fU mA fA mU fU mG fA mU (ps) fU (ps) mU
525
165





EV2083
EV2083-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mA mU mC mA fA fU fU mA mU mG mA mA mG mA mC (ps) mC (ps) mA
526
166





EV2084
EV2084-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mG fG mU fC mU fU mC fA mU fA mA fU mU fG mA (ps) fU (ps) mU
527
167





EV2084
EV2084-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mU mC mA mA fU fU fA mU mG mA mA mG mA mC mC (ps) mA (ps) mC
528
168





EV2085
EV2085-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mG fU mG fG mU fC mU fU mC fA mU fA mA fU mU (ps) fG (ps) mA
529
169





EV2085
EV2085-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mA mA mU mU fA fU fG mA mA mG mA mC mC mA mC (ps) mA (ps) mA
530
170





EV2086
EV2086-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mA fA mC fU mU fG mU fG mG fU mC fU mU fC mA (ps) fU (ps) mA
531
171





EV2086
EV2086-B
mU (ps) mA (ps) mU mG mA mA fG fA fC mC mA mC mA mA mG mU mU (ps) mG (ps) mA
532
172





EV2087
EV2087-A
mC (ps) fU (ps) mU fC mA fA mC fU mU fG mU fG mG fU mC fU mU (ps) fC (ps) mA
533
173





EV2087
EV2087-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mA mA mG mA fC fC fA mC mA mA mG mU mU mG mA (ps) mA (ps) mG
534
174





EV2088
EV2088-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mU fU mC fA mA fC mU fU mG fU mG fG mU fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mC
535
175





EV2088
EV2088-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mA mG mA mC fC fA fC mA mA mG mU mU mG mA mA (ps) mG (ps) mU
536
176





EV2089
EV2089-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mG fU mG fU mU fA mG fU mC fC mC fU mG fA mC (ps) fU (ps) mU
537
177





EV2089
EV2089-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mG mU mC mA fG fG fG mA mC mU mA mA mC mA mC (ps) mC (ps) mA
538
178





EV2090
EV2090-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mU fU mG fG mU fG mU fU mA fG mU fC mC fC mU (ps) fG (ps) mA
539
179





EV2090
EV2090-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mA mG mG mG fA fC fU mA mA mC mA mC mC mA mA (ps) mG (ps) mA
540
180





EV2091
EV2091-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fA mU fG mA fC mA fU mG fG mC fG mG fG mU (ps) fG (ps) mC
541
181





EV2091
EV2091-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mA mC mC mC fG fC fC mA mU mG mU mC mA mU mC (ps) mA (ps) mU
542
182





EV2092
EV2092-A
mG (ps) fG (ps) mA fU mG fA mU fG mA fC mA fU mG fG mC fG mG (ps) fG (ps) mU
543
183





EV2092
EV2092-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mC mC mG mC fC fA fU mG mU mC mA mU mC mA mU (ps) mC (ps) mC
544
184





EV2093
EV2093-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mG fA mU fG mA fU mG fA mC fA mU fG mG fC mG (ps) fG (ps) mG
545
185





EV2093
EV2093-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mC mG mC mC fA fU fG mU mC mA mU mC mA mU mC (ps) mC (ps) mU
546
186





EV2094
EV2094-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mU fG mC fA mA fU mC fC mA fU mC fA mG fU mC (ps) fA (ps) mU
547
187





EV2094
EV2094-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mG mA mC mU fG fA fU mG mG mA mU mU mG mC mA (ps) mC (ps) mA
548
188





EV2095
EV2095-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mU fU mG fU mG fC mA fA mU fC mC fA mU fC mA (ps) fG (ps) mU
549
189





EV2095
EV2095-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mU mG mA mU fG fG fA mU mU mG mC mA mC mA mA (ps) mC (ps) mA
550
190





EV2096
EV2096-A
mC (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mG fU mU fG mU fG mC fA mA fU mC fC mA (ps) fU (ps) mC
551
191





EV2096
EV2096-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mU mG mG mA fU fU fG mC mA mC mA mA mC mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mG
552
192





EV2097
EV2097-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mC fC mA fG mA fU mA fA mU fC mC fU mC (ps) fC (ps) mC
553
193





EV2097
EV2097-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mG mA mG mG fA fU fU mA mU mC mU mG mG mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
554
194





EV2098
EV2098-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fC mC fA mA fA mC fA mC fA mU fA mG fA mC (ps) fA (ps) mU
555
195





EV2098
EV2098-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mG mU mC mU fA fU fG mU mG mU mU mU mG mG mG (ps) mG (ps) mU
556
196





EV2099
EV2099-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fC mA fU mG fU mU fG mC fU mC fA mU fU mG (ps) fU (ps) mC
557
197





EV2099
EV2099-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mC mA mA mU fG fA fG mC mA mA mC mA mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
558
198





EV2100
EV2100-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA fC mA (ps) fC (ps) mA
559
199





EV2100
EV2100-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mU mG mU mU fC fA fA mA mG mU mC mA mA mG mG (ps) mA (ps) mU
560
200





EV2101
EV2101-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA (ps) fC (ps) mA
561
201





EV2101
EV2101-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU (ps) mA (ps) mU
562
202





EV2102
EV2102-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mC fC mA fU mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
563
203





EV2102
EV2102-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mA mA mG mU fC fA fA mG mG mA mU mA mU mG mG (ps) mA (ps) mA
564
204





EV2103
EV2103-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mU fU mU fC mC fA mU fA mU fC mC fU mU fG mA (ps) fC (ps) mU
565
205





EV2103
EV2103-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mU mC mA mA fG fG fA mU mA mU mG mG mA mA mA (ps) mA (ps) mC
566
206





EV2104
EV2104-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mG fU mU fU mU fC mC fA mU fA mU fC mC fU mU (ps) fG (ps) mA
567
207





EV2104
EV2104-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mA mA mG mG fA fU fA mU mG mG mA mA mA mA mC (ps) mC (ps) mU
568
208





EV2105
EV2105-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mC fA mU fU mU fG mG fU mA fG mA fA mA fA mC (ps) fA (ps) mU
569
209





EV2105
EV2105-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mG mU mU mU fU fC fU mA mC mC mA mA mA mU mG (ps) mA (ps) mU
570
210





EV2106
EV2106-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mU fC mA fU mU fU mG fG mU fA mG fA mA fA mA (ps) fC (ps) mA
571
211





EV2106
EV2106-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mU mU mU mU fC fU fA mC mC mA mA mA mU mG mA (ps) mU (ps) mC
572
212





EV2107
EV2107-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mC fG mA fU mC fA mU fU mU fG mG fU mA (ps) fG (ps) mA
573
213





EV2107
EV2107-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mU mA mC mC fA fA fA mU mG mA mU mC mG mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mA
574
214





EV2108
EV2108-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fC mC fA mC fA mG fA mG fA mC fU mC fA mG (ps) fA (ps) mG
575
215





EV2108
EV2108-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mC mU mG mA fG fU fC mU mC mU mG mU mG mG mC (ps) mA (ps) mU
576
216





EV2109
EV2109-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mU fG mC fC mA fC mA fG mA fG mA fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mA
577
217





EV2109
EV2109-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mA mG mU mC fU fC fU mG mU mG mG mC mA mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mU
578
218





EV2110
EV2110-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mC fC mA fU mG fC mC fA mC fA mG fA mG fA mC (ps) fU (ps) mC
579
219





EV2110
EV2110-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mG mU mC mU fC fU fG mU mG mG mC mA mU mG mG (ps) mU (ps) mU
580
220





EV2111
EV2111-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mA fA mC fC mA fU mG fC mC fA mC fA mG fA mG (ps) fA (ps) mC
581
221





EV2111
EV2111-B
mG (ps) mU (ps) mC mU mC mU fG fU fG mG mC mA mU mG mG mU mU (ps) mU (ps) mG
582
222





EV2112
EV2112-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mC fC mA fA mA fC mC fA mU fG mC fC mA fC mA (ps) fG (ps) mA
583
223





EV2112
EV2112-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mU mG mU mG fG fC fA mU mG mG mU mU mU mG mG (ps) mG (ps) mA
584
224





EV2113
EV2113-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mU fU mG fG mC fC mU fG mC fC mA fU mG fG mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
585
225





EV2113
EV2113-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mA mC mC mA fU fG fG mC mA mG mG mC mC mA mA (ps) mG (ps) mA
586
226





EV2114
EV2114-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mA fU mC fU mU fG mG fC mC fU mG fC mC fA mU (ps) fG (ps) mG
587
227





EV2114
EV2114-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mA mU mG mG fC fA fG mG mC mC mA mA mG mA mU (ps) mC (ps) mU
588
228





EV2115
EV2115-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mA fG mA fU mC fU mU fG mG fC mC fU mG fC mC (ps) fA (ps) mU
589
229





EV2115
EV2115-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mG mG mC mA fG fG fC mC mA mA mG mA mU mC mU (ps) mC (ps) mA
590
230





EV2116
EV2116-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mU fG mA fG mA fU mC fU mU fG mG fC mC fU mG (ps) fC (ps) mC
591
231





EV2116
EV2116-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mC mA mG mG fC fC fA mA mG mA mU mC mU mC mA (ps) mG (ps) mU
592
232





EV2117
EV2117-A
mC (ps) fG (ps) mA fA mU fG mA fC mU fG mA fG mA fU mC fU mU (ps) fG (ps) mG
593
233





EV2117
EV2117-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mA mA mG mA fU fC fU mC mA mG mU mC mA mU mU (ps) mC (ps) mG
594
234





EV2118
EV2118-A
mG (ps) fG (ps) mG fC mG fA mA fU mG fA mC fU mG fA mG fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mU
595
235





EV2118
EV2118-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mA mU mC mU fC fA fG mU mC mA mU mU mC mG mC (ps) mC (ps) mC
596
236





EV2119
EV2119-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mA fA mG fU mA fC mU fC mA fG mA fC mA fC mC (ps) fA (ps) mC
597
237





EV2119
EV2119-B
mG (ps) mU (ps) mG mG mU mG fU fC fU mG mA mG mU mA mC mU mU (ps) mU (ps) mG
598
238





EV2120
EV2120-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fA mA fG mU fA mC fU mC fA mG fA mC fA mC (ps) fC (ps) mA
599
239





EV2120
EV2120-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mG mU mG mU fC fU fG mA mG mU mA mC mU mU mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
600
240





EV2121
EV2121-A
mG (ps) fC (ps) mA fC mA fA mA fG mU fA mC fU mC fA mG fA mC (ps) fA (ps) mC
601
241





EV2121
EV2121-B
mG (ps) mU (ps) mG mU mC mU fG fA fG mU mA mC mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mC
602
242





EV2122
EV2122-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mG fC mA fC mA fA mA fG mU fA mC fU mC fA mG (ps) fA (ps) mC
603
243





EV2122
EV2122-B
mG (ps) mU (ps) mC mU mG mA fG fU fA mC mU mU mU mG mU mG mC (ps) mU (ps) mG
604
244





EV2123
EV2123-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fG mG fC mC fU mG fA mU fA mG fU mC fU mG (ps) fG (ps) mC
605
245





EV2123
EV2123-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mC mA mG mA fC fU fA mU mC mA mG mG mC mC mC (ps) mA (ps) mU
606
246





EV2124
EV2124-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mG fC mA fG mG fG mG fA mG fA mC fA mA fA mU (ps) fG (ps) mG
607
247





EV2124
EV2124-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mA mU mU mU fG fU fC mU mC mC mC mC mU mG mC (ps) mA (ps) mC
608
248





EV2125
EV2125-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG fA mU fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
609
249





EV2125
EV2125-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mA mU mA mU fC fA fA mA mG mC mU mC mU mG mU (ps) mU (ps) mU
610
250





EV2126
EV2126-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG fA mU (ps) fA (ps) mU
611
251





EV2126
EV2126-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mA mU mC mA fA fA fG mC mU mC mU mG mU mU mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
612
252





EV2127
EV2127-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mC fA mC fA mA fA mC fA mG fA mG fC mU fU mU (ps) fG (ps) mA
613
253





EV2127
EV2127-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mA mA mA mG fC fU fC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU mG (ps) mU (ps) mC
614
254





EV2128
EV2128-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fU mA fG mA fC mC fU mC fC mU fU mC fC mG (ps) fA (ps) mG
615
255





EV2128
EV2128-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mC mG mG mA fA fG fG mA mG mG mU mC mU mA mC (ps) mA (ps) mU
616
256





EV2129
EV2129-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mU fG mU fA mG fA mC fC mU fC mC fU mU fC mC (ps) fG (ps) mA
617
257





EV2129
EV2129-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mG mG mA mA fG fG fA mG mG mU mC mU mA mC mA (ps) mU (ps) mC
618
258





EV2130
EV2130-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mU fU mG fA mU fG mU fA mG fA mC fC mU fC mC (ps) fU (ps) mU
619
259





EV2130
EV2130-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mG mG mA mG fG fU fC mU mA mC mA mU mC mA mA (ps) mG (ps) mA
620
260





EV2131
EV2131-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mU fC mU fU mG fA mU fG mU fA mG fA mC fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
621
261





EV2131
EV2131-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mA mG mG mU fC fU fA mC mA mU mC mA mA mG mA (ps) mA (ps) mU
622
262





EV2132
EV2132-A
mC (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mU fU mC fU mU fG mA fU mG fU mA fG mA (ps) fC (ps) mC
623
263





EV2132
EV2132-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mU mC mU mA fC fA fU mC mA mA mG mA mA mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mG
624
264





EV2133
EV2133-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mC fC mC fA mU fU mC fU mU fG mA fU mG fU mA (ps) fG (ps) mA
625
265





EV2133
EV2133-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mU mA mC mA fU fC fA mA mG mA mA mU mG mG mG (ps) mG (ps) mA
626
266





EV2134
EV2134-A
mC (ps) fU (ps) mU fA mU fC mC fC mC fA mU fU mC fU mU fG mA (ps) fU (ps) mG
627
267





EV2134
EV2134-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mU mC mA mA fG fA fA mU mG mG mG mG mA mU mA (ps) mA (ps) mG
628
268





EV2135
EV2135-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mG fG mG fU mC fA mG fC mA fU mA fG mG (ps) fG (ps) mA
629
269





EV2135
EV2135-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mC mC mU mA fU fG fC mU mG mA mC mC mC mC mA (ps) mA (ps) mU
630
270





EV2136
EV2136-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mA fU mU fG mG fG mG fU mC fA mG fC mA fU mA (ps) fG (ps) mG
631
271





EV2136
EV2136-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mU mA mU mG fC fU fG mA mC mC mC mC mA mA mU (ps) mA (ps) mC
632
272





EV2137
EV2137-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mC fA mC fC mA fA mC fU mU fG mA fA mU fG mA (ps) fA (ps) mA
633
273





EV2137
EV2137-B
mU (ps) mU (ps) mU mC mA mU fU fC fA mA mG mU mU mG mG mU mG (ps) mU (ps) mA
634
274





EV2138
EV2138-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mC fU mA fC mU fC mC fC mC fA mG fC mU (ps) fG (ps) mA
635
275





EV2138
EV2138-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mA mG mC mU fG fG fG mG mA mG mU mA mG mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mA
636
276





EV2139
EV2139-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mC fC mA fC mU fA mC fU mC fC mC fC mA (ps) fG (ps) mC
637
277





EV2139
EV2139-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mU mG mG mG fG fA fG mU mA mG mU mG mG mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
638
278





EV2140
EV2140-A
mG (ps) fC (ps) mA fG mA fC mA fU mC fC mA fC mU fA mC fU mC (ps) fC (ps) mC
639
279





EV2140
EV2140-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mG mA mG mU fA fG fU mG mG mA mU mG mU mC mU (ps) mG (ps) mC
640
280





EV2141
EV2141-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mC fA mG fA mC fA mU fC mC fA mC fU mA (ps) fC (ps) mU
641
281





EV2141
EV2141-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mU mA mG mU fG fG fA mU mG mU mC mU mG mC mA (ps) mA (ps) mA
642
282





EV2142
EV2142-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fC mA fA mA fU mC fC mU fC mA fU mC fU mU (ps) fG (ps) mG
643
283





EV2142
EV2142-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mA mA mG mA fU fG fA mG mG mA mU mU mU mG mG (ps) mG (ps) mU
644
284





EV2143
EV2143-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mC fC mC fA mA fA mU fC mC fU mC fA mU fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
645
285





EV2143
EV2143-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mA mG mA mU fG fA fG mG mA mU mU mU mG mG mG (ps) mU (ps) mU
646
286





EV2144
EV2144-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mA fC mC fC mA fA mA fU mC fC mU fC mA fU mC (ps) fU (ps) mU
647
287





EV2144
EV2144-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mG mA mU mG fA fG fG mA mU mU mU mG mG mG mU (ps) mU (ps) mU
648
288





EV2145
EV2145-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mA fA mC fC mC fA mA fA mU fC mC fU mC fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mU
649
289





EV2145
EV2145-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mA mU mG mA fG fG fA mU mU mU mG mG mG mU mU (ps) mU (ps) mU
650
290





EV2146
EV2146-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mA fA mA fC mC fC mA fA mA fU mC fC mU fC mA (ps) fU (ps) mC
651
291





EV2146
EV2146-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mU mG mA mG fG fA fU mU mU mG mG mG mU mU mU (ps) mU (ps) mC
652
292





EV2147
EV2147-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mG fA mA fA mA fC mC fC mA fA mA fU mC fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mA
653
293





EV2147
EV2147-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mA mG mG mA fU fU fU mG mG mG mU mU mU mU mC (ps) mU (ps) mA
654
294





EV2148
EV2148-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mA fU mA fG mA fA mA fA mC fC mC fA mA fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
655
295





EV2148
EV2148-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mA mU mU mU fG fG fG mU mU mU mU mC mU mA mU (ps) mA (ps) mA
656
296





EV2149
EV2149-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mG fG mA fG mA fA mG fU mC fG mG fA mA fG mG (ps) fA (ps) mG
657
297





EV2149
EV2149-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mC mC mU mU fC fC fG mA mC mU mU mC mU mC mC (ps) mA (ps) mA
658
298





EV2150
EV2150-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mC fU mG fC mA fC mA fG mG fG mU fA mC fG mG (ps) fG (ps) mU
659
299





EV2150
EV2150-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mC mC mG mU fA fC fC mC mU mG mU mG mC mA mG (ps) mA (ps) mC
660
300





EV2151
EV2151-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mC fA mU fG mA fA mG fG mA fG mU fC mU fU mG (ps) fG (ps) mC
661
301





EV2151
EV2151-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mC mA mA mG fA fC fU mC mC mU mU mC mA mU mG (ps) mU (ps) mA
662
302





EV2152
EV2152-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mG fU mU fA mG fU mC fC mC fU mG fA mC fU mU (ps) fC (ps) mA
663
303





EV2152
EV2152-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mA mA mG mU fC fA fG mG mG mA mC mU mA mA mC (ps) mA (ps) mC
664
304





EV2153
EV2153-A
mC (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mU fG mU fU mG fU mG fC mA fA mU fC mC (ps) fA (ps) mU
665
305





EV2153
EV2153-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mG mG mA mU fU fG fC mA mC mA mA mC mA mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mG
666
306





EV2154
EV2154-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mC fU mU fG mG fC mC fU mG fC mC fA mU fG mG (ps) fU (ps) mU
667
307





EV2154
EV2154-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mC mC mA mU fG fG fC mA mG mG mC mC mA mA mG (ps) mA (ps) mU
668
308





EV2155
EV2155-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mG fA mU fC mU fU mG fG mC fC mU fG mC fC mA (ps) fU (ps) mG
669
309





EV2155
EV2155-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mU mG mG mC fA fG fG mC mC mA mA mG mA mU mC (ps) mU (ps) mC
670
310





EV2156
EV2156-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mA fC mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
671
311





EV2156
EV2156-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mA mA mG mC fU fC fU mG mU mU mU mG mU mG mU (ps) mC (ps) mU
672
312





EV2157
EV2157-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mU fU mG fG mG fG mU fC mA fG mC fA mU fA mG (ps) fG (ps) mG
673
313





EV2157
EV2157-B
mC (ps) mC (ps) mC mU mA mU fG fC fU mG mA mC mC mC mC mA mA (ps) mU (ps) mA
674
314





EV2158
EV2158-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mC fG mU fG mU fC mU fG mC fA mC fA mG fG mG (ps) fU (ps) mA
675
315





EV2158
EV2158-B
mU (ps) mA (ps) mC mC mC mU fG fU fG mC mA mG mA mC mA mC mG (ps) mU (ps) mA
676
316





EV2159
EV2159-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mG fG mA fA mA fG mA fG mA fU mC fU mC fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mA
677
317





EV2159
EV2159-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mA mU mG mA fG fA fU mC mU mC mU mU mU mC mC (ps) mA (ps) mC
678
318





EV2160
EV2160-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fG mU fC mA fU mA fG mC fA mG fU mG fG mA (ps) fA (ps) mA
679
319





EV2160
EV2160-B
mU (ps) mU (ps) mU mC mC mA fC fU fG mC mU mA mU mG mA mC mG (ps) mG (ps) mU
680
320





EV2161
EV2161-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mG fU mA fG mG fU mG fA mC fG mC fU mG fU mC (ps) fU (ps) mU
681
321





EV2161
EV2161-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mG mA mC mA fG fC fG mU mC mA mC mC mU mA mC (ps) mC (ps) mA
682
322





EV2162
EV2162-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fU mU fC mC fU mG fA mC fA mC fG mU fU mC (ps) fG (ps) mC
683
323





EV2162
EV2162-B
mG (ps) mC (ps) mG mA mA mC fG fU fG mU mC mA mG mG mA mA mG (ps) mG (ps) mU
684
324





EV2163
EV2163-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mC fA mU fC mG fA mC fU mC fC mU fU mC fU mA (ps) fU (ps) mG
685
325





EV2163
EV2163-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mU mA mG mA fA fG fG mA mG mU mC mG mA mU mG (ps) mC (ps) mU
686
326





EV2164
EV2164-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fA mU fA mA fC mU fU mG fC mC fA mC fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mC
687
327





EV2164
EV2164-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mA mG mG mU fG fG fC mA mA mG mU mU mA mU mG (ps) mG (ps) mU
688
328





EV2165
EV2165-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fA mC fA mU fG mG fC mG fG mG fU mG fC mG (ps) fG (ps) mU
689
329





EV2165
EV2165-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mC mG mC mA fC fC fC mG mC mC mA mU mG mU mC (ps) mA (ps) mU
690
330





EV2166
EV2166-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mC fA mG fU mA fA mU fU mG fG mG fU mC fC mC (ps) fC (ps) mG
691
331





EV2166
EV2166-B
mC (ps) mG (ps) mG mG mG mA fC fC fC mA mA mU mU mA mC mU mG (ps) mU (ps) mC
692
332





EV2167
EV2167-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mC fA mC fA mU fA mG fA mC fA mU fC mC fA mG (ps) fA (ps) mU
693
333





EV2167
EV2167-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mC mU mG mG fA fU fG mU mC mU mA mU mG mU mG (ps) mU (ps) mU
694
334





EV2168
EV2168-A
mG (ps) fC (ps) mA fU mU fG mA fU mG fU mU fC mA fC mU fU mG (ps) fG (ps) mU
695
335





EV2168
EV2168-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mC mA mA mG fU fG fA mA mC mA mU mC mA mA mU (ps) mG (ps) mC
696
336





EV2169
EV2169-A
mC (ps) fA (ps) mC fA mU fG mU fU mG fC mU fC mA fU mU fG mU (ps) fC (ps) mU
697
337





EV2169
EV2169-B
mA (ps) mG (ps) mA mC mA mA fU fG fA mG mC mA mA mC mA mU mG (ps) mU (ps) mG
698
338





EV2170
EV2170-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mA fC mU fC mA fG mA fG mA fC mU fG mG fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mU
699
339





EV2170
EV2170-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mA mG mC mC fA fG fU mC mU mC mU mG mA mG mU (ps) mC (ps) mU
700
340





EV2171
EV2171-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mG fU mU fC mC fC mA fA mA fC mC fA mU fG mC (ps) fC (ps) mA
701
341





EV2171
EV2171-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mG mC mA mU fG fG fU mU mU mG mG mG mA mA mC (ps) mA (ps) mC
702
342





EV2172
EV2172-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mC fU mU fG mU fG mG fU mA fA mU fC mG (ps) fG (ps) mU
703
343





EV2172
EV2172-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mC mG mA mU fU fA fC mC mA mC mA mA mG mC mA (ps) mA (ps) mC
704
344





EV2173
EV2173-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mC fG mU fC mA fU mA fG mU fC mA fU mA fA mA (ps) fA (ps) mU
705
345





EV2173
EV2173-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mU mU mU mA fU fG fA mC mU mA mU mG mA mC mG (ps) mU (ps) mU
706
346





EV2174
EV2174-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fA mA fU mG fG mG fC mC fU mG fA mU fA mG (ps) fU (ps) mC
707
347





EV2174
EV2174-B
mG (ps) mA (ps) mC mU mA mU fC fA fG mG mC mC mC mA mU mU mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
708
348





EV2175
EV2175-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mA fA mA fG mC fU mC fG mA fG mU fU mG fU mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
709
349





EV2175
EV2175-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mA mA mC mA fA fC fU mC mG mA mG mC mU mU mU (ps) mG (ps) mA
710
350





EV2176
EV2176-A
mU (ps) fG (ps) mU fU mG fC mU fG mG fC mA fA mG fU mG fG mU (ps) fA (ps) mG
711
351





EV2176
EV2176-B
mC (ps) mU (ps) mA mC mC mA fC fU fU mG mC mC mA mG mC mA mA (ps) mC (ps) mA
712
352





EV2177
EV2177-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mA fG mC fC mU fG mG fG mG fC mA fU mA fU mU (ps) fG (ps) mA
713
353





EV2177
EV2177-B
mU (ps) mC (ps) mA mA mU mA fU fG fC mC mC mC mA mG mG mC mU (ps) mA (ps) mU
714
354





EV2178
EV2178-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mC fA mA fA mG fG mA fA mC fC mG fA mG fG mG (ps) fG (ps) mU
715
355





EV2178
EV2178-B
mA (ps) mC (ps) mC mC mC mU fC fG fG mU mU mC mC mU mU mU mG (ps) mU (ps) mA
716
356





EV2179
EV2179-A
mC (ps) fU (ps) mU fU mU fG mC fC mG fC mU fU mC fU mG fG mU (ps) fU (ps) mU
717
357





EV2179
EV2179-B
mA (ps) mA (ps) mA mC mC mA fG fA fA mG mC mG mG mC mA mA mA (ps) mA (ps) mG
718
358





EV2180
EV2180-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mC fU mU fG mG fC mA fG mG fA mA fG mG fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
719
359





EV2180
EV2180-B
mG (ps) mG (ps) mA mG mC mC fU fU fC mC mU mG mC mC mA mA mG (ps) mA (ps) mC
720
360





EV2207
EV2207-A
mU (ps) fC (ps) mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU
754
721





EV2207
EV2024-B
mA (ps) mU (ps) mC mA mA mA fG fC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
408
 48





EV2208
EV2208-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA (ps) fC (ps) mA
755
722





EV2208
EV2101-B
mU (ps) mG (ps) mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU (ps) mA (ps) mU
562
202





EV2209
EV2209-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mU fC mG fC mA fG mC fU mG fU mU fU mU (ps) fA (ps) mA
756
723





EV2209
EV2036-B
mU (ps) mU (ps) mA mA mA mA fC fA fG mC mU mG mC mG mA mC mA (ps) mA (ps) mC
432
 72





EV2210
EV2210-A
mU (ps) fA (ps) mU fG mA fA mA fC mG fA mC fU mU fC mU fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
757
724





EV2210
EV2029-B
mC (ps) mA (ps) mA mG mA mG fA fA fG mU mC mG mU mU mU mC mA (ps) mU (ps) mU
418
 58





EV2211
EV2196-A
(vp)-mU fC mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU
740
721





EV2211
EV2211-B
mA mU mC mA mA mA fG FC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mU
759
 48





EV2212
EV2198-A
(vp)-mU fU mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA (ps) fC (ps) mA
742
722





EV2212
EV2212-B
mU mG mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU (ps) mA (ps) mU
760
202





*: A = 1st strand; B = 2nd strand






The conjugated duplexes listed in Table 5c have various modifications as shown, with reference to Table 4 for an explanation of the abbreviations used. Where appropriate, the sequence of the equivalent unmodified strand from Table 5a is also indicated.









TABLE 5c







Conjugated duplexes















Unmod-






ified






equi-





SEQ
valent


Duplex
Strand

ID
SEQ


ID
Name(*)
Sequence (5′−>3′)
No.
ID No.





EV2181
EV2029-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mU fG mA fA mA fC mG fA mC fU mU fC mU fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
417
 57





EV2181
EV2181-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mC mA mA mG mA mG fA fA fG mU mC mG mU mU mU mC mA (ps)
725
 58




mU (ps) mU







EV2182
EV2036-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mU fC mG fC mA fG mC fU mG fU mU fU mU (ps) fA (ps) mA
431
 71





EV2182
EV2182-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mU mA mA mA mA fC fA fG mC mU mG mC mG mA mC mA (ps)
726
 72




mA (ps) mC







EV2183
EV2050-A
mG (ps) fA (ps) mA fC mA fC mA fU mG fU mU fG mC fU mC fA mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
459
 99





EV2183
EV2183-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mC mA mA mU mG mA fG fC fA mA mC mA mU mG mU mG mU (ps)
727
100




mU (ps) mC







EV2184
EV2148-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mA fU mA fG mA fA mA fA mC fC mC fA mA fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
655
295





EV2184
EV2184-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mG mG mA mU mU mU fG fG fG mU mU mU mU mC mU mA mU (ps)
728
296




mA (ps) mA







EV2185
EV2101-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA (ps) fC (ps) mA
561
201





EV2185
EV2185-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mG mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU (ps)
729
202




mA (ps) mU







EV2186
EV2024-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU
407
 47





EV2186
EV2186-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mA mU mC mA mA mA fG fC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps)
730
 48




mG (ps) mU







EV2187
EV2108-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mG fC mC fA mC fA mG fA mG fA mC fU mC fA mG (ps) fA (ps) mG
575
215





EV2187
EV2187-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mC mU mC mU mG mA fG fU fC mU mC mU mG mU mG mG mC (ps)
731
216




mA (ps) mU







EV2188
EV2144-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mA fC mC fC mA fA mA fU mC fC mU fC mA fU mC (ps) fU (ps) mU
647
287





EV2188
EV2188-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mA mA mG mA mU mG fA fG fG mA mU mU mU mG mG mG mU (ps)
732
288




mU (ps) mU







EV2189
EV2160-A
mA (ps) fC (ps) mC fG mU fC mA fU mA fG mC fA mG fU mG fG mA (ps) fA (ps) mA
679
319





EV2189
EV2189-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mU mU mC mC mA fC fU fG mC mU mA mU mG mA mC mG (ps)
733
320




mG (ps) mU







EV2190
EV2047-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mA fA mC fU mU fG mC fC mA fC mC fU mU fC mU (ps) fC (ps) mA
453
 93





EV2190
EV2190-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mG mA mG mA mA fG fG fU mG mG mC mA mA mG mU mU (ps)
734
 94




mA (ps) mU







EV2191
EV2048-A
mA (ps) fG (ps) mC fC mA fA mA fG mC fA mU fU mG fA mU fG mU (ps) fU (ps) mC
455
 95





EV2191
EV2191-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mG mA mA mC mA mU fC fA fA mU mG mC mU mU mU mG mG (ps)
735
 96




mC (ps) mU







EV2192
EV2159-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mG fG mA fA mA fG mA fG mA fU mC fU mC fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mA
677
317





EV2192
EV2192-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mG mA mU mG mA fG fA fU mC mU mC mU mU mU mC mC (ps)
736
318




mA (ps) mC







EV2193
EV2141-A
mU (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mC fA mG fA mC fA mU fC mC fA mC fU mA (ps) fC (ps) mU
641
281





EV2193
EV2193-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mA mG mU mA mG mU fG fG fA mU mG mU mC mU mG mC mA (ps)
737
282




mA (ps) mA







EV2194
EV2167-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mC fA mC fA mU fA mG fA mC fA mU fC mC fA mG (ps) fA (ps) mU
693
333





EV2194
EV2194-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mA mU mC mU mG mG fA fU fG mU mC mU mA mU mG mU mG (ps)
738
334




mU (ps) mU







EV2195
EV2125-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG fA mU fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
609
249





EV2195
EV2195-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mG mG mA mU mA mU fC fA fA mA mG mC mU mC mU mG mU (ps)
739
250




mU (ps) mU







EV2196
EV2196-A
(vp)-mU fC mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU
740
721





EV2196
EV2186-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mA mU mC mA mA mA fG fC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps)
730
 48




mG (ps) mU







EV2197
EV2197-A
(vp)-mU fU mA fU mA fG mA fA mA fA mC fC mC fA mA fA mU (ps) fC (ps) mC
741
295





EV2197
EV2184-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mG mG mA mU mU mU fG fG fG mU mU mU mU mC mU mA mU (ps)
728
296




mA (ps) mA







EV2198
EV2198-A
(vp)-mU fU mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA (ps) fC (ps) mA
742
722





EV2198
EV2185-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mG mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU (ps)
729
202




mA (ps) mU







EV2199
EV2199-A
mA (ps) fU (ps) mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA fC (ps2) mA
743
201





EV2199
EV2199-B
[ST23]3 ST41 mU (ps2) mG mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU mA (ps2)
744
202




mU







EV2200
EV2200-A
(vp)-mU fU mA fU mC fC mU fU mG fA mC fU mU fU mG fA mA fC (ps2) mA
745
722





EV2200
EV2199-B
[ST23]3 ST41 mU (ps2) mG mU mU mC mA fA fA fG mU mC mA mA mG mG mA mU mA (ps2)
744
202




mU







EV2201
EV2201-A
(vp)-mU fU mU fG mU fC mG fC mA fG mC fU mG fU mU fU mU (ps) fA (ps) mA
746
723





EV2201
EV2182-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mU mU mA mA mA mA fC fA fG mC mU mG mC mG mA mC mA (ps)
726
 72




mA (ps) mC







EV2202
EV2202-A
mG (ps) fU (ps) mU fG mU fC mG fC mA fG mC fU mG fU mU fU mU fA (ps2) mA
747
 71





EV2202
EV2202-B
[ST23]3 ST41 mU (ps2) mU mA mA mA mA fC fA fG mC mU mG mC mG mA mC mA mA (ps2)
748
 72




mC







EV2203
EV2203-A
(vp)-mU fU mU fG mU fC mG fC mA fG mC fU mG fU mU fU mU fA (ps2) mA
749
723





EV2203
EV2202-B
[ST23]3 ST41 mU (ps2) mU mA mA mA mA fC fA fG mC mU mG mC mG mA mC mA mA (ps2)
748
 72




mC







EV2204
EV2204-A
(vp)-mU fA mU fG mA fA mA fC mG fA mC fU mU fC mU fC mU (ps) fU (ps) mG
750
724





EV2204
EV2181-B
[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mC mA mA mG mA mG fA fA fG mU mC mG mU mU mU mC mA (ps)
725
 58




mU (ps) mU







EV2205
EV2205-A
mA (ps) fA (ps) mU fG mA fA mA fC mG fA mC fU mU fC mU fC mU fU (ps2) mG
751
 57





EV2205
EV2205-B
[ST23]3 ST41 mC (ps2) mA mA mG mA mG fA fA fG mU mC mG mU mU mU mC mA mU (ps2)
752
 58




mU







EV2206
EV2206-A
(vp)-mU fA mU fG mA fA mA fC mG fA mC fU mU fC mU fC mU fU (ps2) mG
753
724





*: A = 1st strand; B = 2nd strand













>NM_001710.6 Homo sapiens complement factor B


(CFB), mRNA


SEQ ID No. 758


GGGAAGGGAATGTGACCAGGTCTAGGTCTGGAGTTTCAGCTTGGACACTG





AGCCAAGCAGACAAGCAAAGCAAGCCAGGACACACCATCCTGCCCCAGGC





CCAGCTTCTCTCCTGCCTTCCAACGCCATGGGGAGCAATCTCAGCCCCCA





ACTCTGCCTGATGCCCTTTATCTTGGGCCTCTTGTCTGGAGGTGTGACCA





CCACTCCATGGTCTTTGGCCCGGCCCCAGGGATCCTGCTCTCTGGAGGGG





GTAGAGATCAAAGGCGGCTCCTTCCGACTTCTCCAAGAGGGCCAGGCACT





GGAGTACGTGTGTCCTTCTGGCTTCTACCCGTACCCTGTGCAGACACGTA





CCTGCAGATCTACGGGGTCCTGGAGCACCCTGAAGACTCAAGACCAAAAG





ACTGTCAGGAAGGCAGAGTGCAGAGCAATCCACTGTCCAAGACCACACGA





CTTCGAGAACGGGGAATACTGGCCCCGGTCTCCCTACTACAATGTGAGTG





ATGAGATCTCTTTCCACTGCTATGACGGTTACACTCTCCGGGGCTCTGCC





AATCGCACCTGCCAAGTGAATGGCCGATGGAGTGGGCAGACAGCGATCTG





TGACAACGGAGCGGGGTACTGCTCCAACCCGGGCATCCCCATTGGCACAA





GGAAGGTGGGCAGCCAGTACCGCCTTGAAGACAGCGTCACCTACCACTGC





AGCCGGGGGCTTACCCTGCGTGGCTCCCAGCGGCGAACGTGTCAGGAAGG





TGGCTCTTGGAGCGGGACGGAGCCTTCCTGCCAAGACTCCTTCATGTACG





ACACCCCTCAAGAGGTGGCCGAAGCTTTCCTGTCTTCCCTGACAGAGACC





ATAGAAGGAGTCGATGCTGAGGATGGGCACGGCCCAGGGGAACAACAGAA





GCGGAAGATCGTCCTGGACCCTTCAGGCTCCATGAACATCTACCTGGTGC





TAGATGGATCAGACAGCATTGGGGCCAGCAACTTCACAGGAGCCAAAAAG





TGTCTAGTCAACTTAATTGAGAAGGTGGCAAGTTATGGTGTGAAGCCAAG





ATATGGTCTAGTGACATATGCCACATACCCCAAAATTTGGGTCAAAGTGT





CTGAAGCAGACAGCAGTAATGCAGACTGGGTCACGAAGCAGCTCAATGAA





ATCAATTATGAAGACCACAAGTTGAAGTCAGGGACTAACACCAAGAAGGC





CCTCCAGGCAGTGTACAGCATGATGAGCTGGCCAGATGACGTCCCTCCTG





AAGGCTGGAACCGCACCCGCCATGTCATCATCCTCATGACTGATGGATTG





CACAACATGGGCGGGGACCCAATTACTGTCATTGATGAGATCCGGGACTT





GCTATACATTGGCAAGGATCGCAAAAACCCAAGGGAGGATTATCTGGATG





TCTATGTGTTTGGGGTCGGGCCTTTGGTGAACCAAGTGAACATCAATGCT





TTGGCTTCCAAGAAAGACAATGAGCAACATGTGTTCAAAGTCAAGGATAT





GGAAAACCTGGAAGATGTTTTCTACCAAATGATCGATGAAAGCCAGTCTC





TGAGTCTCTGTGGCATGGTTTGGGAACACAGGAAGGGTACCGATTACCAC





AAGCAACCATGGCAGGCCAAGATCTCAGTCATTCGCCCTTCAAAGGGACA





CGAGAGCTGTATGGGGGCTGTGGTGTCTGAGTACTTTGTGCTGACAGCAG





CACATTGTTTCACTGTGGATGACAAGGAACACTCAATCAAGGTCAGCGTA





GGAGGGGAGAAGCGGGACCTGGAGATAGAAGTAGTCCTATTTCACCCCAA





CTACAACATTAATGGGAAAAAAGAAGCAGGAATTCCTGAATTTTATGACT





ATGACGTTGCCCTGATCAAGCTCAAGAATAAGCTGAAATATGGCCAGACT





ATCAGGCCCATTTGTCTCCCCTGCACCGAGGGAACAACTCGAGCTTTGAG





GCTTCCTCCAACTACCACTTGCCAGCAACAAAAGGAAGAGCTGCTCCCTG





CACAGGATATCAAAGCTCTGTTTGTGTCTGAGGAGGAGAAAAAGCTGACT





CGGAAGGAGGTCTACATCAAGAATGGGGATAAGAAAGGCAGCTGTGAGAG





AGATGCTCAATATGCCCCAGGCTATGACAAAGTCAAGGACATCTCAGAGG





TGGTCACCCCTCGGTTCCTTTGTACTGGAGGAGTGAGTCCCTATGCTGAC





CCCAATACTTGCAGAGGTGATTCTGGCGGCCCCTTGATAGTTCACAAGAG





AAGTCGTTTCATTCAAGTTGGTGTAATCAGCTGGGGAGTAGTGGATGTCT





GCAAAAACCAGAAGCGGCAAAAGCAGGTACCTGCTCACGCCCGAGACTTT





CACATCAACCTCTTTCAAGTGCTGCCCTGGCTGAAGGAGAAACTCCAAGA





TGAGGATTTGGGTTTTCTATAAGGGGTTTCCTGCTGGACAGGGGCGTGGG





ATTGAATTAAAACAGCTGCGACAACA





Claims
  • 1. A double-stranded nucleic acid for inhibiting expression of complement factor B (CFB), wherein the nucleic acid comprises a first strand and a second strand, wherein the unmodified equivalent of the first strand sequence comprises a sequence from any one of the first strand sequences of SEQ ID No. 721, 57, 71, 295, 201, 47, 319, 249, 295, 722, 723, 724.
  • 2. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the unmodified equivalent of the second strand sequence comprises a sequence from any one of the corresponding second strand sequences of 48, 58, 72, 296, 202, 48, 320, 250, 296, 202, 72, 58.
  • 3. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the first strand and the second strand form a duplex region of from 17-25 nucleotides in length.
  • 4. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the nucleic acid mediates RNA interference.
  • 5. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the first strand sequence comprises SEQ ID No. 721 and wherein the second strand comprises SEQ ID No: 48.
  • 6. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the first strand sequence consists of SEQ ID No. 721 and optionally wherein the second strand consists of SEQ ID NO: 48.
  • 7. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein at least one nucleotide of the first and/or second strand is a modified nucleotide.
  • 8. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the first strand has a terminal 5′ (E)-vinylphosphonate nucleotide at its 5′ end.
  • 9. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the nucleic acid comprises a phosphorothioate linkage between the terminal two or three 3′ nucleotides and/or 5′ nucleotides of the first and/or the second strand and preferably wherein the linkages between the remaining nucleotides are phosphodiester linkages.
  • 10. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the first strand sequence comprises (vp)-mU fC mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU (SEQ ID No. 740) and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprisesmA mU mC mA mA mA fG fC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mU (SEQ ID No: 759).
  • 11. The nucleic acid of claim 1, wherein the nucleic acid is conjugated to a heterologous moiety.
  • 12. The nucleic acid of claim 11, wherein the heterologous moiety comprises (i) one or more N-acetyl galactosamine (GalNAc) moieties or derivatives thereof, and (ii) a linker, wherein the linker conjugates the at least one GalNAc moiety or derivative thereof to the nucleic acid.
  • 13. The nucleic acid of claim 11, wherein the first strand sequence comprises (vp)-mU fC mA fC mA fA mA fC mA fG mA fG mC fU mU fU mG (ps) fA (ps) mU (SEQ ID No. 740) and optionally wherein the second strand sequence comprises[ST23(ps)]3 ST41 (ps) mA mU mC mA mA mA fG fC fU mC mU mG mU mU mU mG mU (ps) mG (ps) mU (SEQ ID No: 730).
  • 14. A composition comprising a nucleic acid of claim 1 and a solvent and/or a delivery vehicle and/or a physiologically acceptable excipient and/or a carrier and/or a salt and/or a diluent and/or a buffer and/or a preservative. and/or a further therapeutic agent selected from the group comprising an oligonucleotide, a small molecule, a monoclonal antibody, a polyclonal antibody and a peptide.
  • 15. A method of treating a disease, disorder or syndrome comprising administration of a nucleic acid of claim 1 to an individual in need of treatment.
  • 16. A method of treating a disease, disorder or syndrome comprising administration of a composition of claim 14 to an individual in need of treatment.
  • 17. The method of claim 16, wherein the disease, disorder or syndrome is a complement-mediated disease, disorder or syndrome.
  • 18. The method of claim 16, wherein the disease, disorder or syndrome is associated with aberrant activation or over-activation of the complement pathway and/or with over-expression or ectopic expression or localisation or accumulation of CFB.
  • 19. The method of claim 16, wherein the disease, disorder or syndrome is: a) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), lupus nephritis, IgA nephropathy (IgA N), myasthenia gravis (MG), primary membranous nephropathy, immune complex-mediated glomerulonephritis (IC-mediated GN), post-infectious glomerulonephritis (PIGN), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), ischemia/reperfusion injury, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), dysbiotic periodontal disease, malarial anaemia, neuromyelitis optica, post-HCT/solid organ transplant (TMAs), Guillain-Barré syndrome, membranous glomerulonephritis, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and sepsis;b) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), lupus nephritis, IgA nephropathy (IgA N) and primary membranous nephropathy;c) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), myasthenia gravis (MG), IgA nephropathy (IgA N), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH);d) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), myasthenia gravis (MG), neuromyelitis optica, atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS), antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies-associated vasculitis (ANCA-AV), IgA nephropathy (IgA N), post-HCT/Solid Organ Transplant (TMAs), Guillain-Barre syndrome, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), membranous glomerulonephritis, lupus nephritis and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpurae) selected from the group comprising C3 glomerulopathy (C3G) and IgA nephropathy (IgA N); orf) C3 glomerulopathy (C3G).
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
21194654.6 Sep 2021 EP regional
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/EP2022/074386 9/1/2022 WO