Systematic analysis of siRNA and mRNA features impacting fully chemically modified siRNA efficacy

  • Sarah M. Davis
  • , Samuel Hildebrand
  • , Hannah J. Macmillan
  • , Kathryn R. Monopoli
  • , Julianna Buchwald
  • , Jacquelyn Sousa
  • , David Cooper
  • , Socheata Ly
  • , Dimas Echeverria
  • , Nicholas Mchugh
  • , Chantal Ferguson
  • , Andrew Coles
  • , Vignesh N. Hariharan
  • , Daniel O'Reilly
  • , Qi Tang
  • , Raymond Furgal
  • , Ken Yamada
  • , Julia F. Alterman
  • , James W. Gilbert
  • , Emily Knox
  • Yamilett Pineda, Caitlyn N. Weston, Christina E. Baer, Athma A. Pai, Anastasia Khvorova

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Chemically modified small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) are a promising drug class that silences disease-causing genes via mRNA degradation. Both siRNA-specific features (e.g. sequence, modification pattern, and structure) and target mRNA-specific factors contribute to observed efficacy. Systematically defining the relative contributions of siRNA sequence, structure, and modification pattern versus the native context of the target mRNA is necessary to inform design considerations and facilitate the widespread application of this therapeutic platform. To address this, we synthesized a panel of ∼1260 differentially modified siRNAs and evaluated their silencing efficiency against therapeutically relevant mRNAs (APP, BACE1, MAPT, and SNCA) using both reporter-based and native expression assays. Our results demonstrate that the siRNA modification pattern (e.g. level of 2′-O-methyl content) significantly impacts efficacy, while structural features (e.g. symmetric versus asymmetric configurations) do not. Furthermore, we observed substantial differences in the number of effective siRNAs identified per target. These target-specific differences in hit rates are largely mitigated when efficacy is tested in the context of a reporter assay, confirming that native mRNA-specific features influence siRNA performance. Key target-specific factors, including exon usage, polyadenylation site selection, and ribosomal occupancy, partially explained efficacy variability. These insights led to a proposed framework of parameters for optimizing therapeutic siRNA design.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbergkaf479
JournalNucleic acids research
Volume53
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 8 2025
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Genetics

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