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Aln-TMP: A Subcutaneously Administered RNAi Therapeutic Targeting Tmprss6 For The Treatment Of β-Thalassemia

Authors :
Julia Hettinger
Tim Racie
James Butler
Brian Bettencourt
Klaus Charisse
Kevin Fitzgerald
Shannon Fishman
Source :
Blood. 122:2260-2260
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2013.

Abstract

The b-Thalassemias are a group of hereditary blood disorders resulting from insufficient beta globin production, ultimately giving rise to the signature clinical sequelae associated with β-Thalassemia which includes anemia, ineffective erythropoiesis, and secondary iron overload. Previously, we demonstrated that intravenous administration of an siRNA targeting hepatic Tmprss6 expression significantly ameliorated the disease phenotype in the Hbbth3/+ mouse model of Thalassemia Intermedia (Blood. 2013; 14;121(7):1200-8). The Tmprss6 gene encodes for the protein Matriptase-2 which negatively regulates Hepcidin gene expression by cleaving the Hepcidin regulatory protein Hemojuvelin; RNAi-mediated suppression of Tmprss6 removes this negative regulator, ultimately leading to an increase in Hepcidin expression. Increased Hepcidin expression leads to a significant decrease in serum iron concentration and Transferrin Saturation (TfSat), which in the β-Thalassemia disease setting, corrects ineffective erythropoiesis, ameliorates anemia, and mitigates secondary iron overload. The role of Tmprss6 in iron metabolism has been extensively characterized in animal and human studies and, together with the observation in the Hbbth3/+ mouse, represents an attractive therapeutic target for the treatment of β-Thalassemia. To this end, we developed ALN-TMP, a subcutaneous RNAi therapeutic targeting hepatic Tmprss6 for the treatment of β-Thalassemia. ALN-TMP employs the GalNAc conjugate siRNA delivery platform that safely and effectively delivers siRNA to the liver for hepatic gene silencing. Preclinical animal data demonstrate ALN-TMP exhibits robust and durable dose-dependent gene suppression as single dose administration of ALN-TMP leads to > 80% Tmprss6 gene suppression for up to 3 weeks post-dose. This leads to concomitant increases in Hepcidin gene expression (>2x baseline levels) and subsequent decreases in total serum iron and TfSat (>50% decrease from baseline). The degree to which ALN-TMP modulates Hepcidin and serum iron mobilization is nearly identical to that observed in the previous Hbbth3/+ mouse studies and suggests ALN-TMP is a potent RNAi therapeutic with the potential of producing disease modifying effects in β-Thalassemia. Disclosures: Butler: Alnylam: Employment. Fishman:Alnylam: Employment. Racie:Alnylam Pharmaceutical, Inc: Employment. Hettinger:Alnylam Pharmaceuticals: Employment. Bettencourt:Alnylam Pharmaceuticals: Employment. Charisse:Alnylam Pharmaceuticals: Employment. Fitzgerald:Alnylam: Employment.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4af7cec3ad251b9c7d069bccc14392ac
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v122.21.2260.2260