Amide Internucleoside
Linkages Suppress the MicroRNA-like
Off-Target Activity of Short Interfering RNA
Posted on 2025-01-15 - 16:35
RNA interference (RNAi) has rapidly matured as a novel
therapeutic
approach. In this field, chemical modifications have been critical
to the clinical success of short interfering RNAs (siRNAs). Notwithstanding
the significant advances, achieving robust durability and gene silencing
in extrahepatic tissues, as well as reducing off-target effects of
siRNA, are areas where chemical modifications can still improve siRNA
performance. The present study developed the challenging synthesis
of amide-linked guanosine dimers (GAM1G and GAM1A) and completed an “amide walk” one by one, systematically
replacing every internucleoside phosphate with an amide linkage in
a guide strand targeting the PIK3CB gene. Dual-luciferase and RT-qPCR
assays in HeLa cells showed that, in a model system of unmodified
siRNAs, the amide linkage at position 3 (between nucleosides 3 and
4) suppressed the cleavage of off-target YY1 and FADD mRNAs similarly
to the industry gold standard modification glycol nucleic acid (GNA).
These results suggest that amide linkages in the seed region have
strong potential to improve the specificity of siRNAs by suppressing
the microRNA-like off-target activity.
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Pal, Chandan; Richter, Michael; Harasgama, Jayamini; Rozners, Eriks (2025). Amide Internucleoside
Linkages Suppress the MicroRNA-like
Off-Target Activity of Short Interfering RNA. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.4c00824