Abstract

Antisense Oligonucleotides (ASOs) are an emerging drug class in gene modification. In our study we developed a safe, stable, and effective ASO drug candidate in locked nucleic acid (LNA)-gapmer design, targeting TGFβ receptor II (TGFBR2) mRNA. Discovery was performed as a process using state-of-the-art library development and screening. We intended to identify a drug candidate optimized for clinical development, therefore human specificity and gymnotic delivery were favored by design. A staggered process was implemented spanning in-silico-design, in-vitro transfection, and in-vitro gymnotic delivery of small batch syntheses. Primary in-vitro and in-vivo toxicity studies and modification of pre-lead candidates were also part of this selection process. The resulting lead compound NVP-13 unites human specificity and highest efficacy with lowest toxicity. We particularly focused at attenuation of TGFβ signaling, addressing both safety and efficacy. Hence, developing a treatment to potentially recondition numerous pathological processes mediated by elevated TGFβ signaling, we have chosen to create our data in human lung cell lines and human neuronal stem cell lines, each representative for prospective drug developments in pulmonary fibrosis and neurodegeneration. We show that TGFBR2 mRNA as a single gene target for NVP-13 responds well, and that it bears great potential to be safe and efficient in TGFβ signaling related disorders.

Highlights

  • Antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) technology has exceptionally developed in recent years [1]

  • We identified a modified ASO with flanking locked nucleic acid wings (LNA, gapmer design) as drug candidate to hybridize with the mRNA for human TGFBR2, and inhibit harmfully elevated TGFβ signaling

  • The objective in this study was to identify a highly specific, human reactive, safe, effective, and stable antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) targeting the human TGFBR2 mRNA based on LNA gapmer technology as drug candidate for further development

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Summary

Introduction

Antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) technology has exceptionally developed in recent years [1]. Antisense technology is gaining upcoming relevance in the field of therapeutic applications [2,4,5,6,7,8]. TGFβ is a mastermind in many physiological processes and acts through the canonical SMAD signaling pathway or other non-canonical pathways [12]. This essential growth factor is involved in a broad variety of pathophysiological processes, where a persistent disruption of canonical and/or non-canonical TGFβ pathways is implicated in the development of various human disorders in general, and in neurodegenerative disorders in particular

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