Yesterday, oligonucleotide therapeutics developer Wave Life Sciences provided a high-level preview on how it will deploy its RNA Editing technology. Accordingly, modulating protein-protein interactions and, even more so, increasing gene expression will be the declared mechanisms of action of development candidates following its lead candidate WVE-006 for alpha-1-antitrypsin disease (AATD).
WVE-006 was recently licensed to GSK and should be the
first RNA Editing candidate to enter clinical development later this year. A big milestone for the field. WVE-006 corrects a common single nucleotide
mutation in the alpha-1-antitrypsin gene, Z-AAT, that causes both liver and lung
manifestations of AATD. Z-AAT is retained in liver
hepatocytes to cause cellular stress instead of being secreted to do its job and protect the
lung. As such, WVE-006 can be considered both a mutation corrector and gene function booster.
Mutations often scattered across genes
More often than not, however, mutations causing rare
genetic diseases are scattered across a gene and precision genetic medicines targeting small segments of a gene at a time may thus only address
a subset of patients. A prime example is
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy where even exon 51 skipping which is the approach with
the largest addressable patients still only serves 11-13% of the overall DMD population.
DMD patient segmentation according to skipped exon (from Wave Life Sciences presentation)
A very interesting indication for ADAR RNA Editing is
Rett Syndrome (affects 1 in 10000 girls by age 12 in the US). Here as well are the mutations scattered across
the MeCP2 gene. Almost half of those
would be addressable by RNA Editing (including eliminating stop codons), but each
individual target would be quite small.
So instead of targeting the specific mutations, ADAR
Editing may also be used to screen all adenines in the MeCP2 transcript to
identify those that lead to an increase in protein abundance and thus function
either by stabilizing the resulting mRNA or by increasing MeCP2 stability. While this approach would not apply to Rett
Syndrome caused by 2 null mutations on the X chromosomes, a say 3x increase in activity of the chromatin
CpG-binding protein may be enough to alleviate disease in a large fraction of
Rett Syndrome patients with MeCP2 versions having reduced activity. Or consider mutant
CFTR proteins in cystic fibrosis with reduced channel activity. Increase the
abundance of those CFTR mutant proteins and it should increase the overall
desired activity.
The screening approach would also facilitate finding
potent RNA editing oligos due to the flexibility and increase in targeting
space as opposed to having to optimize the editing oligo around a small defined target site.
mRNA technology
Wave Life Sciences likened the gene upregulation
approach as a simpler version of mRNA therapeutic technology. Simpler, because it does not involve the
delivery of long mRNAs which necessitates the use of LNPs and similar larger
nanoparticle formulations due to mRNA stability requirements. By contrast, RNA editing can be mediated by
oligos ~30 nucleotides in length, short enough to be amenable to conjugation
and oligo chemistry strategies already applied in RNaseH and splice modulation
ASO and RNAi.
Smaller also means better tissue penetration and
delivery to more target tissues.
Moreover, meaningful expression from an mRNA only
occurs in short bursts so that the frequency of repeat administration is dictated
by protein half-life. Meanwhile, the administration
frequency for oligo-mediated editing, due to the longer persistence of highly
stabilized oligos, can be expected to be in the weeks and months.
It should be noted though that RNA editing would essentially upregulate what is already present in the cell (with the exception of the one editing change), whereas mRNA therapeutics
in sensu strictu can generate entirely new proteins.
RNA editing would also not be the first
oligonucleotide approach to mRNA upregulation.
RNA activation, the targeting of promoter-proximal regions using
RNAi-type double-strand RNAs, and the targeting of upstream 5’ UTR mRNA elements
with steric blocking antisense molecules as developed by Ionis Pharmaceuticals
are competing approaches. These,
however, have so far either lacked the robustness or the flexibility in terms
of sequence choice that AàI
editing should afford.
Now more than ever in biotechnology, companies need to
carefully tease out the unique, differentiating advantages of a platform
technology when selecting an indication.
RNA Editing leaders ProQR and Wave Life Sciences are in the fortunate
position that they can apply the new biotech paradigm starting with their first
RNA Editing candidates. Biotech is ripe for a reboot and RNA Editing should have every ambition to be part of it.
Disclosure: I own both
ProQR and Wave Life Sciences shares, though ProQR considerably more.