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Dowerah D, V. N. Uppuladinne M, Sarma PJ, Biswakarma N, Sonavane UB, Joshi RR, Ray SK, Namsa ND, Deka RC. Design of LNA Analogues Using a Combined Density Functional Theory and Molecular Dynamics Approach for RNA Therapeutics. ACS OMEGA 2023; 8:22382-22405. [PMID: 37396274 PMCID: PMC10308574 DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c07860] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/09/2022] [Accepted: 02/17/2023] [Indexed: 07/04/2023]
Abstract
Antisense therapeutics treat a wide spectrum of diseases, many of which cannot be addressed with the current drug technologies. In the quest to design better antisense oligonucleotide drugs, we propose five novel LNA analogues (A1-A5) for modifying antisense oligonucleotides and establishing each with the five standard nucleic acids: adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), thymine (T), and uracil (U). Monomer nucleotides of these modifications were considered for a detailed Density Functional Theory (DFT)-based quantum chemical analysis to determine their molecular-level structural and electronic properties. A detailed MD simulation study was done on a 14-mer ASO (5'-CTTAGCACTGGCCT-3') containing these modifications targeting PTEN mRNA. Results from both molecular- and oligomer-level analysis clearly depicted LNA-level stability of the modifications, the ASO/RNA duplexes maintaining stable Watson-Crick base pairing preferring RNA-mimicking A-form duplexes. Notably, monomer MO isosurfaces for both purines and pyrimidines were majorly distributed on the nucleobase region in modifications A1 and A2 and in the bridging unit in modifications A3, A4, and A5, suggesting that A3/RNA, A4/RNA, and A5/RNA duplexes interact more with the RNase H and solvent environment. Accordingly, solvation of A3/RNA, A4/RNA, and A5/RNA duplexes was higher compared to that of LNA/RNA, A1/RNA, and A2/RNA duplexes. This study has resulted in a successful archetype for creating advantageous nucleic acid modifications tailored for particular needs, fulfilling a useful purpose of designing novel antisense modifications, which may overcome the drawbacks and improve the pharmacokinetics of existing LNA antisense modifications.
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Affiliation(s)
- Dikshita Dowerah
- CMML—Catalysis
and Molecular Modelling Lab, Department of Chemical Sciences, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784 028, India
| | - Mallikarjunachari V. N. Uppuladinne
- HPC—Medical
& Bioinformatics Applications Group, Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC), Panchavati, Pashan, Pune 411008, India
| | - Plaban J. Sarma
- CMML—Catalysis
and Molecular Modelling Lab, Department of Chemical Sciences, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784 028, India
- Department
of Chemistry, Gargaon College, Sivasagar, Assam 785685, India
| | - Nishant Biswakarma
- CMML—Catalysis
and Molecular Modelling Lab, Department of Chemical Sciences, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784 028, India
| | - Uddhavesh B. Sonavane
- HPC—Medical
& Bioinformatics Applications Group, Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC), Panchavati, Pashan, Pune 411008, India
| | - Rajendra R. Joshi
- HPC—Medical
& Bioinformatics Applications Group, Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC), Panchavati, Pashan, Pune 411008, India
| | - Suvendra K. Ray
- Department
of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784028, India
- Center
for Multidisciplinary Research, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784028, India
| | - Nima D. Namsa
- Department
of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784028, India
- Center
for Multidisciplinary Research, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784028, India
| | - Ramesh Ch. Deka
- CMML—Catalysis
and Molecular Modelling Lab, Department of Chemical Sciences, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784 028, India
- Center
for Multidisciplinary Research, Tezpur University, Napaam, Sonitpur, Assam 784028, India
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Haegele JA, Boyanapalli R, Goyal J. Improvements to Hybridization-Ligation Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay Methods to Overcome Bioanalytical Challenges Posed by Novel Oligonucleotide Therapeutics. Nucleic Acid Ther 2022; 32:350-359. [PMID: 35404142 PMCID: PMC9416565 DOI: 10.1089/nat.2021.0100] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/30/2022] Open
Abstract
As oligonucleotides (ONs) and similar nucleic acid therapeutic modalities enter development pipelines, there is continual need to develop bioanalytical methodologies addressing unique challenges they pose. Novel ONs back bone chemistries, especially those enabling stereochemical control, and base modifications are being exploited to improve pharmacological properties, potency, and increase half-lives. These changes have strained established methods, oftentimes precluding development of assays sensitive and specific enough to meet the needs of preclinical programs. For stereopure ONs representing a single molecular species, nontrivial presence of chain-shortened metabolites in biological samples necessitate assays with high specificity. To meet these needs, this report presents a toolbox of novel techniques, easy to implement for existing hybridization-ligation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay formats, which address this challenge and yield significant sensitivity and specificity enhancements. Ligation efficiency was improved up to 61-fold through addition of polyethylene glycol, betaine, or dimethylsulfoxide, mitigating major differences among sequence-matched ONs of varying stereopurity, enabling sensitivities below 0.100 ng/mL for quantitation. These improvements enabled further refinement of capture probe designs engendering sufficient specificity to discriminate N-1 chain-shortened metabolites at both the 5′ and 3′ end of the ONs. These generalizable methods advance the performance of mainstay bioanalytical assays, facilitating research and development of innovative ONs therapeutics.
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Affiliation(s)
| | | | - Jaya Goyal
- Wave Life Sciences USA, Inc., Lexington, Massachusetts, USA
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