Abstract
Although many issues remain to be resolved, recent progress suggests that oligonucleotides may have therapeutic potential. The first therapeutic oligonucleotide, ISIS 2105, an oligonucleotide designed to treat genital warts, has completed Phase I clinical trials and is undergoing Phase II testing. Conceptually, oligonucleotides may interact with nucleic acid or nonnucleic acid receptors; however, rational design of oligonucleotide drugs to interact with nucleic acid receptors is significantly simpler because the factors that determine affinity and selectivity are better understood. Recent progress demonstrates that this information can be coupled to rapid advances in the medicinal chemistry of oligonucleotides to create new generations of oligonucleotide drugs with dramatically improved properties. The purposes of this review are to place oligonucleotide therapeutics in the context of modern molecular drug discovery and to summarize progress in understanding the pharmacodynamic properties of oligonucleotides designed to bind to nucleic acid receptors. The pharmacokinetic and toxicologic properties of oligonucleotides have been reviewed recently (1-4). The activities of oligonucleotides that bind to nonnucleic acid receptors will be considered in future reviews.
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