Inhalable Bottlebrush Polymer Bioconjugates as Vectors for Efficient Pulmonary Delivery of Oligonucleotides

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Abstract

Antisense oligonucleotides hold therapeutic promise for various lung disorders, but their efficacy is limited by suboptimal delivery. To address this challenge, we explored the use of inhaled bottlebrush polymer-DNA conjugates, named pacDNA, as a delivery strategy. Inhaled pacDNA exhibits superior mucus penetration, achieving a uniform and sustained lung distribution in mice. Targeting the 5′ splice site of an aberrant enhanced green fluorescence protein (EGFP) pre-mRNA in EGFP-654 mice, inhaled pacDNA more efficiently corrects splicing than a B-peptide conjugate and restores EGFP expression in the lung. Additionally, in an orthotopic NCI-H358 non-small-cell lung tumor mouse model, inhaled pacDNA targeting wild-type KRAS mRNA effectively suppresses KRAS expression and inhibits lung tumor growth, requiring a substantially lower dosage compared to intravenously injected pacDNA. These findings demonstrate the potential of bottlebrush polymer-DNA conjugates as a promising agent for enhanced oligonucleotide therapy in the lung and advancing the treatment landscape for lung disorders.

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Fang, Y., Cai, J., Ren, M., Zhong, T., Wang, D., & Zhang, K. (2024). Inhalable Bottlebrush Polymer Bioconjugates as Vectors for Efficient Pulmonary Delivery of Oligonucleotides. ACS Nano, 18(1), 592–599. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.3c08660

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