Over the weekend, blue chip antisense oligonucleotide company Ionis and genome editing competitor Intellia presented data on targeting prekallikrein (PKK) for treating hereditary hemeangioedema (Ionis donidalorsen here, Intellia NTLA-2002 here).
Using CRISPR Cas9
endonucleolytic disruption of the KLKB1 gene coding for PKK following LNP delivery, Intellia came out as
the apparent winner in this showdown. Not only did they demonstrate more pronounced PKK
inhibition, but also more consistent elimination of debilitating attacks characteristic
of the disease. Moreover, by exploring
less frequent antisense oligonucleotide administrations despite suboptimal low -60% knockdown,
Ionis indicates that it is worried about the safety and tolerability profile of
donidalorsen.
Whether reversible
approaches like antisense and RNAi or irreversible approaches like CRISPR gene
disruption will ultimately prevail in the HAE race remains to be seen and will likely be decided by the safety of suppressing PKK expression over the long-term. If there
is an overshoot of CRISPR-mediated gene disruption that would e.g. result in blood clotting abnormalities,
even for a subset of patients, the field would be wide open
for reversible methods.
Ionis invests in genome editing
But whether that will be antisense remains to be seen. Especially for targets in the liver, RNAi currently clearly rules the land for gene knockdown: highly potent, titratable and reversible knockdown with 5 years counting without a notable setback, especially related to off-target toxicity. By contrast, Ionis is being held back by persistent safety issues as it has been beating a dead horse with its phosphorothioate-based backbone chemistry although it appears to be finally weaning itself off with chemistries such as the Mspa backbone.
So it is probably the hope of leap-frogging the RNAi competition by adopting genome editing as Ionis today announced that it was partnering with CRISPR genome editing company Metagenomi. The HAE data comparison could not have come at a more opportune time.
One declared aim of the investment
in genome editing is life-cycle management of existing franchises.
In the liver, these franchises (TTR amyloidosis, ApoC3, PCSK9 etc) are
currently and in the foreseeable future being dominated by RNAi despite Ionis’
heavy investments, so it clearly makes sense to amortize its investments in disease-specific market research, commercial infrastructure and clinical trial experience to accelerate the success of a more promising approach.
TTR amyloidosis is a
great example where even GalNAc-conjugated follow-on antisense compounds are
unlikely to challenge Alnylam’s suite of RNAi triggers. Also due to this dominance, it makes less
sense for Ionis to develop an RNAi competitor drug despite its access and now
actual adoption of this modality for targets in the muscle. But as TTR shows, other genome editing companies
are already competing for some of these targets so it won’t be all that simple
trying to leap-frog RNAi and Alnylam like that.
The rise of the
multi-modality oligonucleotide therapeutics companies
After straight-forward
antisense for gene knockdown and then splice modulation, with the recent adoption of
RNAi and genome editing, Ionis is rapidly expanding its oligonucleotide
modality toolbox.
In fact, it is becoming
a little bit like smaller competitor Wave Life Sciences which has been
practicing all types of antisense (knockdown, splice modulation, more recently RNA editing)
and RNAi using a bewildering mix of chemistries. Not only are they burning through cash as if
there was no recession and inflation problem, I never liked that because clinical failure after failure (esp. minute target engagements at best) suggest that the company is stretching itself
too thin.
By comparison, Ionis, with $2 billion
in cash and a more experienced and bigger operation is a different
beast altogether and may be able to pull it off, at least on a technical level. However, instead of spending $80M in upfront
alone on a modality that is somewhat further removed from its traditional chemistries
(longer mRNAs, LNP delivery for CRISPR), it could have much more synergistically leveraged
its investments in chemistry and delivery by investing that same amount in the
ripe-for-the-picking RNA editing. Accordingly,
$80M is more than the market cap of my currently favourite RNA editing
investment, ProQR.
I’m sure the
opportunity to expand druggable targets and indications by applying existing delivery
technologies and chemistry know-how by adopting RNA editing is not lost on RNAi
players such as Alnylam and especially Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals. Arrowhead in particular, having scooped up the RNAi assets of Novartis and Roche for peanuts has demonstrated an ability to recognize and act on similar opportunities.
The Beal Lab out of UCD recently published (10/31/22) a paper in the Royal Society of Chemistry Journal, https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2022/cb/d2cb00165a, that seems to expand PRQR's approach to RNA editing. The paper is very technical, but I hope you would confirm that it has some significance.
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