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Tuesday, April 4, 2023

ProQR and Partner Eli Lilly Demonstrate Oligonucleotide-induced RNA Editing in the CNS: A Major De-risking Event for the Industry

With every new oligonucleotide therapeutics modality that feeds into an endogenous cellular mechanism comes uncertainty as to whether the mechanism is sufficiently robust to be of therapeutic utility.  

This is especially true for RNA Editing as in its early days targeted AàI editing was only shown with the concomitant DNA-directed overexpression of ADAR along with an targeting RNA or the introduction of recombinant ADAR-antisense conjugates of little direct therapeutic use.  Similarly, simply introducing into a cell a chemically synthesized antisense oligonucleotide hybridizing to the area surrounding the target adenosine in an mRNA will only give you minute editing efficiencies in cell culture without further structural and chemical optimization.

The liver and CNS, due to their gene target richness and the demonstrated clinical feasibility of delivering oligonucleotides to these organs, are of particular importance to the RNA Editing industry.  The demonstration byscientists from Wave Life Sciences of oligonucleotide-directed RNA Editing in non-human primates was therefore an enormous de-risking event in that it showed that RNA Editing is sufficiently robust in living primate livers.

Of similar importance was the revelation by ProQR and their partners from Eli Lilly last week that this also holds true for the primate nervous system following the intrathecal administration of an editing oligonucleotide.  10-30% editing were seen in the brain depending on the anatomical location investigated.  In both the mice (intracerebroventricular delivery) and cynomolgous monkeys, editing was highest in the cortex.  Even higher editing levels, up to 50%, were observed in the spinal cord of non-human primates.




The spinal cord (motor neurons) also happens to be the location of the most successful oligonucleotide therapeutic currently on the market: SPINRAZA (nusinersen) for spinal muscular atrophy.  Since RNA Editing is quite new and many do not fully appreciate what 10-50% editing efficiencies mean, SPINRAZA can serve as a good example for how impactful such target engagements can be particular for gain-of-function approaches.

SPINRAZA is a splice modulator and works through gain-of-function by obscuring an intronic splice silencer element in the SMN2 pre-mRNA.  Typically, only 10-20% of SMN2 mRNA is ‘correctly’ spliced to yield a functional full-length protein.  With 12mg of SPINRAZA in infants (same dose used for the RNA editing studies in cynomolgous monkeys), this increases 2-3x.  This means that an approximately 10-40% successful target engagement can save babies from certain death and, if given early enough, may allow children with the type I SMA mutations to grow up almost normally.

In the case of the (undisclosed) target gene that Eli Lilly is looking at, these types of target engagements with RNA editing resulted in 5-25x increases in protein function.  Because of the above and because gain-of-function is a particular competitive strength of RNA editing, this application should be prioritized in target selection of industry pipelines.

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