Abstract

Oligonucleotides with a nucleotide sequence complementary to various regions of human plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1) mRNA have been studied as antisense inhibitors of expression of PAI-1 protein in cultured cells [human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), human aortic smooth muscle cells, human hybrid endothelial cells]. Hexadeca(deoxyribonucleoside phosphorothioate) 13 complementary to a fragment of a signal peptide PAI-1 mRNA was found to be most active, giving ca. 70% inhibition of PAI-1 release in a time- and dose-dependent way. The stereo-regular A11-S P and All-R P diastereomers of 13 were studied and found to inhibit PAI-1 synthesis in HUVEC in a stereo-dependent manner, with the All-S P diastereomer considerably more active than the stereo-random construct and All-R P isomer. The observed stereo-dependent activity of oligonucleotide phosphorothioate constructs is presumably governed by their resistance to nucleases. The corresponding phosphodiester analogue of 13 was not active unless covalently bound at its 5′-end to a lipophilic alcohol residue (menthol, heptadecanol). The observed antisense activity of phosphodiester oligonucleotide bioconjugates in cultured human hybrid endothelial cells was paralleled by their increased stability in human plasma with respect to unconjugated oligonucleotide. The oligo(deoxyribonucleoside phosphorothioate) complementary to the same signal peptide region of rat PAI-1 mRNA was found to reduce the PAI-1 level in blood plasma of rats after intravenous administration into the tail vein. The effect was both time- and dose-dependent. The same oligonucleotide was found to protect against arterial thrombus formation in the rat (lower incidence of venous thrombosis, lower thrombus weight, and increased occlusion time in experimentally induced thrombosis). An anti-PAI-1 inhibitory activity has been independently reported for a 20-mer oligo(2′- O-methyl-ribonucleoside phosphorothioate) complementary to a 3′-untranslated region of human PAI-1 mRNA in cultured HUVEC and human aortic smooth muscle cells.

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