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Featured researches published by Jason Klein.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Dynamic PolyConjugates for targeted in vivo delivery of siRNA to hepatocytes

David B. Rozema; David L. Lewis; Darren H. Wakefield; So C. Wong; Jason Klein; Paula L. Roesch; Stephanie L. Bertin; Tom W. Reppen; Qili Chu; Andrei V. Blokhin; James E. Hagstrom; Jon A. Wolff

Achieving efficient in vivo delivery of siRNA to the appropriate target cell would be a major advance in the use of RNAi in gene function studies and as a therapeutic modality. Hepatocytes, the key parenchymal cells of the liver, are a particularly attractive target cell type for siRNA delivery given their central role in several infectious and metabolic disorders. We have developed a vehicle for the delivery of siRNA to hepatocytes both in vitro and in vivo, which we have named siRNA Dynamic PolyConjugates. Key features of the Dynamic PolyConjugate technology include a membrane-active polymer, the ability to reversibly mask the activity of this polymer until it reaches the acidic environment of endosomes, and the ability to target this modified polymer and its siRNA cargo specifically to hepatocytes in vivo after simple, low-pressure i.v. injection. Using this delivery technology, we demonstrate effective knockdown of two endogenous genes in mouse liver: apolipoprotein B (apoB) and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (ppara). Knockdown of apoB resulted in clear phenotypic changes that included a significant reduction in serum cholesterol and increased fat accumulation in the liver, consistent with the known functions of apoB. Knockdown of ppara also resulted in a phenotype consistent with its known function, although with less penetrance than observed in apoB knockdown mice. Analyses of serum liver enzyme and cytokine levels in treated mice indicated that the siRNA Dynamic PolyConjugate was nontoxic and well tolerated.


Molecular Therapy | 2013

Hepatocyte-targeted RNAi Therapeutics for the Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis B Virus Infection

Christine I. Wooddell; David B. Rozema; Markus Hossbach; Matthias John; Holly Hamilton; Qili Chu; Julia Hegge; Jason Klein; Darren H. Wakefield; Claudia E. Oropeza; Jochen Deckert; Ingo Roehl; Kerstin Jahn-Hofmann; Philipp Hadwiger; Hans Peter Vornlocher; Alan McLachlan; David L. Lewis

RNA interference (RNAi)-based therapeutics have the potential to treat chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in a fundamentally different manner than current therapies. Using RNAi, it is possible to knock down expression of viral RNAs including the pregenomic RNA from which the replicative intermediates are derived, thus reducing viral load, and the viral proteins that result in disease and impact the immune systems ability to eliminate the virus. We previously described the use of polymer-based Dynamic PolyConjugate (DPC) for the targeted delivery of siRNAs to hepatocytes. Here, we first show in proof-of-concept studies that simple coinjection of a hepatocyte-targeted, N-acetylgalactosamine-conjugated melittin-like peptide (NAG-MLP) with a liver-tropic cholesterol-conjugated siRNA (chol-siRNA) targeting coagulation factor VII (F7) results in efficient F7 knockdown in mice and nonhuman primates without changes in clinical chemistry or induction of cytokines. Using transient and transgenic mouse models of HBV infection, we show that a single coinjection of NAG-MLP with potent chol-siRNAs targeting conserved HBV sequences resulted in multilog repression of viral RNA, proteins, and viral DNA with long duration of effect. These results suggest that coinjection of NAG-MLP and chol-siHBVs holds great promise as a new therapeutic for patients chronically infected with HBV.


Nucleic Acid Therapeutics | 2012

Co-Injection of a Targeted, Reversibly Masked Endosomolytic Polymer Dramatically Improves the Efficacy of Cholesterol-Conjugated Small Interfering RNAs In Vivo

So C. Wong; Jason Klein; Holly Hamilton; Qili Chu; Christina L. Frey; Vladimir Trubetskoy; Julia Hegge; Darren H. Wakefield; David B. Rozema; David L. Lewis

Effective in vivo delivery of small interfering (siRNA) has been a major obstacle in the development of RNA interference therapeutics. One of the first attempts to overcome this obstacle utilized intravenous injection of cholesterol-conjugated siRNA (chol-siRNA). Although studies in mice revealed target gene knockdown in the liver, delivery was relatively inefficient, requiring 3 daily injections of 50 mg/kg of chol-siRNA to obtain measurable reduction in gene expression. Here we present a new delivery approach that increases the efficacy of the chol-siRNA over 500-fold and allows over 90% reduction in target gene expression in mice and, for the first time, high levels of gene knockdown in non-human primates. This improved efficacy is achieved by the co-injection of a hepatocyte-targeted and reversibly masked endosomolytic polymer. We show that knockdown is absolutely dependent on the presence of hepatocyte-targeting ligand on the polymer, the cognate hepatocyte receptor, and the cholesterol moiety of the siRNA. Importantly, we provide evidence that this increase in efficacy is not dependent on interactions between the chol-siRNA with the polymer prior to injection or in the bloodstream. The simplicity of the formulation and efficacy of this mode of siRNA delivery should prove beneficial in the use of siRNA as a therapeutic.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2015

Protease-triggered siRNA delivery vehicles.

David B. Rozema; Andrei V. Blokhin; Darren H. Wakefield; Jonathan D. Benson; Jeffrey C. Carlson; Jason Klein; Lauren Almeida; Anthony L. Nicholas; Holly Hamilton; Qili Chu; Julia Hegge; So C. Wong; Vladimir S. Trubetskoy; Collin Hagen; Eric Argirios Kitas; Jon A. Wolff; David L. Lewis

The safe and efficacious delivery of membrane impermeable therapeutics requires cytoplasmic access without the toxicity of nonspecific cytoplasmic membrane lysis. We have developed a mechanism for control of cytoplasmic release which utilizes endogenous proteases as a trigger and results in functional delivery of small interfering RNA (siRNA). The delivery approach is based on reversible inhibition of membrane disruptive polymers with protease-sensitive substrates. Proteolytic hydrolysis upon endocytosis restores the membrane destabilizing activity of the polymers thereby allowing cytoplasmic access of the co-delivered siRNA. Protease-sensitive polymer masking reagents derived from polyethylene glycol (PEG), which inhibit membrane interactions, and N-acetylgalactosamine, which targets asialoglycoprotein receptors on hepatocytes, were synthesized and used to formulate masked polymer-siRNA delivery vehicles. The size, charge and stability of the vehicles enable functional delivery of siRNA after subcutaneous administration and, with modification of the targeting ligand, have the potential for extrahepatic targeting.


Archive | 2007

Polyconjugates for in vivo delivery of polynucleotides

David B. Rozema; Darren H. Wakefield; Jason Klein; So Wong; Jon A. Wolff; David L. Lewis; James E. Hagstrom; Andrei Blokhin; Vladimir Trubetskoy; Hans Herweijer


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2005

Membrane activity and transfection ability of amphipathic polycations as a function of alkyl group size.

Darren H. Wakefield; Jason Klein; Jon A. Wolff; David B. Rozema


Archive | 2004

Process for generating multilayered particles

Vladimir S. Trubetskoy; Jon A. Wolff; James E. Hagstrom; Vladimir G. Budker; So Chun Wong; Jason Klein


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2006

Hepatocyte targeting of nucleic acid complexes and liposomes by a T7 phage p17 peptide.

So C. Wong; Darren H. Wakefield; Jason Klein; Sean D. Monahan; David B. Rozema; David L. Lewis; Lori Higgs; James J. Ludtke; Alex V. Sokoloff; Jon A. Wolff


Archive | 2005

Formation of polyampholytes in the presence of a polyion

Darren H. Wakefield; David B. Rozema; Jon A. Wolff; Vladimir S. Trubetskoy; James E. Hagstrom; Vladimir G. Budker; Jason Klein; So Wong


optical fiber communication conference | 2004

Transient control in RFAs for multi-pumping environments by using a multi-objective optimization approach

Sidney Nascimento Givigi; Marcio Freitas; A.R. de Almeida; Luiz C. Calmon; Jason Klein

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David B. Rozema

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jon A. Wolff

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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David L. Lewis

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Julia Hegge

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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