Ionizable liposomal siRNA therapeutics enables potent and persistent treatment of Hepatitis B

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Abstract

Small interfering RNA (siRNA) constitutes a promising therapeutic modality supporting the potential functional cure of hepatitis B. A novel ionizable lipidoid nanoparticle (RBP131) and a state-of-the-art lyophilization technology were developed in this study, enabling to deliver siRNA targeting apolipoprotein B (APOB) into the hepatocytes with an ED50 of 0.05 mg/kg after intravenous injection. In addition, according to the requirements of Investigational New Drug (IND) application, a potent siRNA targeting hepatitis B virus (HBV) was selected and encapsulated with RBP131 to fabricate a therapeutic formulation termed RB-HBV008. Efficacy investigations in transient and transgenic mouse models revealed that the expressions of viral RNAs and antigens (HBsAg and HBeAg), as well as viral DNA, were repressed, dose-dependently and time-dependently at multilog decreasing amplitude, in both circulation and liver tissue. In contrast, entecavir (ETV), the first-line clinically-employed nucleoside analog drug, barely recused the antigen expression, although it triggered as high as 3.50 log reduction of viral DNA, in line with clinical observations. Moreover, the toxicity profiles suggested satisfactory safety outcomes with ten times the therapeutic window. Therefore, this study provides an effective nucleic acid delivery system and a promising RNAi agent for the treatment of hepatitis B.

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Huang, Y., Zheng, S., Guo, Z., de Mollerat du Jeu, X., Liang, X. J., Yang, Z., … Liang, Z. (2022). Ionizable liposomal siRNA therapeutics enables potent and persistent treatment of Hepatitis B. Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-021-00859-y

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