GalNAc-Lipid nanoparticles enable non-LDLR dependent hepatic delivery of a CRISPR base editing therapy

Lisa N. Kasiewicz(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Souvik Biswas(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Aaron Beach(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Huilan Ren(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Chaitali Dutta(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Anne Marie Mazzola(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Ellen Rohde(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Alexandra C. Chadwick(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Christopher H.K. Cheng(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Sara P. Garcia(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Sowmya Iyer(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Yuri Matsumoto(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Amit V. Khera(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Kiran Musunuru(University of Pennsylvania), Sekar Kathiresan(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Padma Malyala(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev(Verve Therapeutics (United States)), Andrew M. Bellinger(Verve Therapeutics (United States))
Nature Communications
May 15, 2023
Cited by 138Open Access
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Abstract

Lipid nanoparticles have demonstrated utility in hepatic delivery of a range of therapeutic modalities and typically deliver their cargo via low-density lipoprotein receptor-mediated endocytosis. For patients lacking sufficient low-density lipoprotein receptor activity, such as those with homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, an alternate strategy is needed. Here we show the use of structure-guided rational design in a series of mouse and non-human primate studies to optimize a GalNAc-Lipid nanoparticle that allows for low-density lipoprotein receptor independent delivery. In low-density lipoprotein receptor-deficient non-human primates administered a CRISPR base editing therapy targeting the ANGPTL3 gene, the introduction of an optimized GalNAc-based asialoglycoprotein receptor ligand to the nanoparticle surface increased liver editing from 5% to 61% with minimal editing in nontargeted tissues. Similar editing was noted in wild-type monkeys, with durable blood ANGPTL3 protein reduction up to 89% six months post dosing. These results suggest that GalNAc-Lipid nanoparticles may effectively deliver to both patients with intact low-density lipoprotein receptor activity as well as those afflicted by homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia.


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