Lipid-like materials for low-dose, in vivo gene silencing

Kevin T. Love(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Kerry P. Mahon(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Christopher G. Levins(Boston Children's Hospital), Kathryn A. Whitehead(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), William Querbes(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), J. Robert Dorkin(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), June Qin(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), William Cantley(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Liu Liang Qin(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Timothy Racie(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Maria Frank-Kamenetsky(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Ka Ning Yip(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Rene Alvarez(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Dinah W.Y. Sah(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Antonin de Fougerolles(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Kevin Fitzgerald(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Victor Koteliansky(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Akin Akinc(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Róbert Langer(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Daniel G. Anderson(Boston Children's Hospital)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 11, 2010
Cited by 965Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Significant effort has been applied to discover and develop vehicles which can guide small interfering RNAs (siRNA) through the many barriers guarding the interior of target cells. While studies have demonstrated the potential of gene silencing in vivo, improvements in delivery efficacy are required to fulfill the broadest potential of RNA interference therapeutics. Through the combinatorial synthesis and screening of a different class of materials, a formulation has been identified that enables siRNA-directed liver gene silencing in mice at doses below 0.01 mg/kg. This formulation was also shown to specifically inhibit expression of five hepatic genes simultaneously, after a single injection. The potential of this formulation was further validated in nonhuman primates, where high levels of knockdown of the clinically relevant gene transthyretin was observed at doses as low as 0.03 mg/kg. To our knowledge, this formulation facilitates gene silencing at orders-of-magnitude lower doses than required by any previously described siRNA liver delivery system.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis