Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development (Jun 2024)

siRNA-mediated reduction of a circulating protein in swine using lipid nanoparticles

  • Massimo F. Cau,
  • Francesca Ferraresso,
  • Monica Seadler,
  • Katherine Badior,
  • Youjie Zhang,
  • Laura M. Ketelboeter,
  • Geoffrey G. Rodriguez,
  • Taylor Chen,
  • Matteo Ferraresso,
  • Amanda Wietrzny,
  • Madelaine Robertson,
  • Amber Haugen,
  • Pieter R. Cullis,
  • Marc de Moya,
  • Mitchell Dyer,
  • Christian J. Kastrup

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 2
p. 101258

Abstract

Read online

Genetic manipulation of animal models is a fundamental research tool in biology and medicine but is challenging in large animals. In rodents, models can be readily developed by knocking out genes in embryonic stem cells or by knocking down genes through in vivo delivery of nucleic acids. Swine are a preferred animal model for studying the cardiovascular and immune systems, but there are limited strategies for genetic manipulation. Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) efficiently deliver small interfering RNA (siRNA) to knock down circulating proteins, but swine are sensitive to LNP-induced complement activation-related pseudoallergy (CARPA). We hypothesized that appropriately administering optimized siRNA-LNPs could knock down circulating levels of plasminogen, a blood protein synthesized in the liver. siRNA-LNPs against plasminogen (siPLG) reduced plasma plasminogen protein and hepatic plasminogen mRNA levels to below 5% of baseline values. Functional assays showed that reducing plasminogen levels modulated systemic blood coagulation. Clinical signs of CARPA were not observed, and occasional mild and transient hepatotoxicity was present in siPLG-treated animals at 5 h post-infusion, which returned to baseline by 7 days. These findings advance siRNA-LNPs in swine models, enabling genetic engineering of blood and hepatic proteins, which can likely expand to proteins in other tissues in the future.

Keywords