Recent advances in mRNA technology, accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, mark the beginning of a therapeutic revolution in medicine, promising a new wave of RNA-based therapeutics to help tackle a wide range of illnesses.
However, there is an ongoing effort to overcome sensitive storage requirements, the risk of unwanted side effects from high doses and the short lifespan of synthetic mRNA.
This article explores how scientists are tackling these challenges and intensifying efforts to develop mRNA therapeutics for different diseases.
Download this article to learn more about:
- Lipid nanoparticles and other key advances in the breakthrough of mRNA therapeutics
- How researchers enhance the stability of synthetic mRNA for use in vaccines
- Targeting RNA-based therapeutics to specific tissues
Heralding a New Era of RNA
Therapeutics
Article Published: March 3, 2022 | Alison Halliday, PhD
Recent advances in mRNA technology, accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic,
mark the beginning of a therapeutic revolution in medicine.
Messenger RNA, or mRNA, was first discovered in 1961. More than half a century
later, the world’s first mRNA vaccines against COVID-19 gained emergency
approval in several countries – just 11 months after the genome sequence of SARSCoV-
2 was released.
“The mRNA acts as a stepping stone between the DNA and the proteins that do the
actions in our cells,” describes Anna Blakney, assistant professor at the University
of British Columbia, Vancouver. “It carries a piece of genetic code to the cell’s
protein-making machinery.”
Traditional vaccines use viral protein fragments or weakened viruses to train our
immune system. However, the crucial ingredient in the BNT162b2
(BioNTech/Pfizer) and mRNA-1273 (Moderna) COVID-19 vaccines was instead
mRNA coding for the spike protein that allows the coronavirus to enter our cells.
“Cells around the injection site take up the mRNA and begin to make the viral
protein, displaying it on their surface,” explains John Cooke, chair of the
department of cardiovascular sciences and medical director of the Center for RNA
Therapeutics at the Houston Methodist Research Institute. “Our immune system
recognizes it as abnormal and begins to mount a response against it.”
Billions of people worldwide have now received a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine. But the
potential applications of this game-changing technology extend far beyond
preventative vaccines – promising a new wave of RNA-based therapeutics to help
tackle a wide range of illnesses.
Game-changing technology
Researchers have been investigating mRNA vaccines for several decades – making
important discoveries that underpinned the rapid deployment of the technology to
combat the COVID-19 pandemic. Previously, the safe and efficient delivery of
fragile mRNA molecules into cells had proved a major obstacle to the success of
the approach. The solution to this problem came from the development of
protective tiny bubbles of fat – lipid nanoparticles, or LNPs, as a delivery system.
“This was a major breakthrough,” enthuses Blakney. “It meant that we didn’t have
to deliver grams of mRNA because the process was so inefficient.”
The discovery of modified building blocks in our RNA – which help it to evade
immune detection was also important. Both the BNT162b2 and mRNA-1273
COVID-19 vaccines incorporate pseudouridine, helping to enhance the stability of
the synthetic mRNA and shelter it from the immune system.
While the approval of two COVID-19 mRNA vaccines within days of each other
marked a major milestone in the field, there are ongoing challenges that still need
to be overcome. Not least, both vaccines rely on a costly series of temperaturecontrolled
shipments and storage – creating barriers around their distribution,
especially to remote communities that lack reliable electricity or refrigeration.
“When the pandemic hit, we just hadn’t reached the point of making sure these
vaccines were shelf-stable for a long time,” says Blakney. “It just wasn’t a priority
because we just needed to get them to work first.”
As well as developing mRNA vaccine formulations with less stringent temperature
requirements, another huge priority is finding ways to lower the dose to reduce
the risk of unwanted side effects, including arm soreness or flu-like symptoms.
“In the context of a pandemic, feeling ill for a short period is a compromise most
people are willing to take,” states Blakney. “But they may not want to take that risk
for more routine injections.”
Blakney’s team is working on the next generation of RNA vaccines that aim to
achieve that goal – using self-amplifying RNA (saRNA) that can make copies of itself
once it’s inside the cell. In their experiments, they have shown it may be possible to
use around a hundred times lower dose of saRNA compared with standard mRNA.
Beyond vaccines
A major advantage of the mRNA vaccine platform is its flexibility – the same
formulation can be used each time, adding only one unique component: an mRNA
sequence for the required protein.
“It takes only around two days to design a new mRNA vaccine, as long as you know
which protein you need to target,” says Blakney.
Scientists are now intensifying efforts to develop mRNA vaccines for various other
infectious diseases – from seasonal-flu to HIV and malaria. But the possibilities
extend much further than preventative vaccines.
“RNA therapeutics are going to revolutionize medicine because there are so many
opportunities to ameliorate disease,” predicts Cooke. “You can make mRNA
encoding any protein in the body – and that provides a lot of potential for new
therapies.”
The seemingly endless possibilities include using mRNA to replace faulty or
deficient proteins – or to help the immune system to fight cancer. There is even the
tantalizing opportunity to apply mRNA-based approaches to produce therapeutic
antibodies inside the body – circumventing the need to manufacture and deliver
these treatments in protein format.
But the short lifespan of synthetic mRNA in the body is currently a barrier to
unlocking the full potential of the technology. Once inside a cell, the linear
molecules are prone to degradation by enzymes.
“The RNA will last for a couple of hours – and the protein it codes for may last for a
couple of days, but then it’s gone,” says Cooke. “While that’s long enough for a
vaccine, it’s a problem if you want to have a longer-lasting effect.”
One potential solution could be the use of circular RNAs (circRNAs), which are
unusually stable as their lack of open ends prevents enzymatic degradation.
“In our program, we’ve found that circular RNA can last for days,” says Cooke.
Targeted approaches
Targeting RNA-based therapeutics to specific places in the body is also proving a
major hurdle.
“If you’re injecting mRNA in lipid nanoparticle formulations intramuscularly or
subcutaneously, that’s where the RNA reaches,” explains Cooke. “If it’s delivered
intravenously, it mainly goes to the liver and stays there – which is great if you’re
treating a liver disease, but not if you’re trying to reach other organs.”
Researchers are exploring a variety of different methods to target the RNA to
different organs. For example, Cooke’s team is developing ways to deliver RNAbased
therapies into the heart, such as directly into the pericardium or into the
venous system of the heart through the jugular vein.
Targeting mRNA to specific immune cells could help improve a type of cancer
immunotherapy – called chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy. The
treatment involves removing the patient’s T cells from their blood and modifying
them by adding the gene for a receptor that helps them to recognize cancer cells
better. The engineered CAR T-cells are then given back to the patient – boosting
the ability of the immune system to fight their disease.
“It’s a very complex process,” says Cooke. “If you could instead inject mRNA
encoding the receptor targeted to T cells, it would provide a much simpler way of
treating the patient.”
In a recent study, researchers successfully generated transient CAR T cells entirely
inside the body by injecting modified mRNA in lipid nanoparticles targeted to T
cells. The ability to produce CAR T cells in the body using mRNA may have several
therapeutic applications for treating a variety of diseases.
A new era in medicine
The clinical success of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines has thrust the technology into the
limelight.
“Before the pandemic, it was seen as quite a high-risk technology because nobody
had ever done a Phase III trial,” says Blakney. “But we’ve now seen they have
excellent efficiency and safety profiles – that’s been a total game-changer for the
field.”
The door is now wide open for the development of a new raft of next-generation
RNA-based therapeutics with the potential to replace existing therapies or provide
cures for currently intractable diseases.
“It’s a new arrow in our quiver,” enthuses Cooke. “The field is going to continue to
grow and deliver many revolutionary new therapies for patients.”
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