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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer L. S. Willoughby is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer L. S. Willoughby.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Multivalent N‑Acetylgalactosamine-Conjugated siRNA Localizes in Hepatocytes and Elicits Robust RNAi-Mediated Gene Silencing

Jayaprakash K. Nair; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Amy Chan; Klaus Charisse; Md. Rowshon Alam; Qianfan Wang; Menno Hoekstra; Pachamuthu Kandasamy; Alexander V. Kel’in; Nate Taneja; Jonathan O′Shea; Sarfraz Shaikh; Ligang Zhang; Ronald J. van der Sluis; Michael E. Jung; Akin Akinc; Renta Hutabarat; Satya Kuchimanchi; Kevin Fitzgerald; Tracy Zimmermann; Theo J.C. van Berkel; Martin Maier; Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev; Muthiah Manoharan

Conjugation of small interfering RNA (siRNA) to an asialoglycoprotein receptor ligand derived from N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) facilitates targeted delivery of the siRNA to hepatocytes in vitro and in vivo. The ligands derived from GalNAc are compatible with solid-phase oligonucleotide synthesis and deprotection conditions, with synthesis yields comparable to those of standard oligonucleotides. Subcutaneous (SC) administration of siRNA-GalNAc conjugates resulted in robust RNAi-mediated gene silencing in liver. Refinement of the siRNA chemistry achieved a 5-fold improvement in efficacy over the parent design in vivo with a median effective dose (ED50) of 1 mg/kg following a single dose. This enabled the SC administration of siRNA-GalNAc conjugates at therapeutically relevant doses and, importantly, at dose volumes of ≤1 mL. Chronic weekly dosing resulted in sustained dose-dependent gene silencing for over 9 months with no adverse effects in rodents. The optimally chemically modified siRNA-GalNAc conjugates are hepatotropic and long-acting and have the potential to treat a wide range of diseases involving liver-expressed genes.


ChemBioChem | 2015

Hepatocyte‐Specific Delivery of siRNAs Conjugated to Novel Non‐nucleosidic Trivalent N‐Acetylgalactosamine Elicits Robust Gene Silencing in Vivo

Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev; Jayaprakash K. Nair; Muthusamy Jayaraman; Klaus Charisse; Nate Taneja; Jonathan O'Shea; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Kristina Yucius; Tuyen Nguyen; Svetlana Shulga-Morskaya; Abigail Liebow; William Querbes; Anna Borodovsky; Kevin Fitzgerald; Martin Maier; Muthiah Manoharan

We recently demonstrated that siRNAs conjugated to triantennary N‐acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) induce robust RNAi‐mediated gene silencing in the liver, owing to uptake mediated by the asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR). Novel monovalent GalNAc units, based on a non‐nucleosidic linker, were developed to yield simplified trivalent GalNAc‐conjugated oligonucleotides under solid‐phase synthesis conditions. Synthesis of oligonucleotide conjugates using monovalent GalNAc building blocks required fewer synthetic steps compared to the previously optimized triantennary GalNAc construct. The redesigned trivalent GalNAc ligand maintained optimal valency, spatial orientation, and distance between the sugar moieties for proper recognition by ASGPR. siRNA conjugates were synthesized by sequential covalent attachment of the trivalent GalNAc to the 3′‐end of the sense strand and resulted in a conjugate with in vitro and in vivo potency similar to that of the parent trivalent GalNAc conjugate design.


Amyloid | 2016

Preclinical evaluation of RNAi as a treatment for transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis

James Butler; Amy Chan; Susete Costelha; Shannon Fishman; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Todd Borland; Donald J. Foster; Paula Gonçalves; Qingmin Chen; June Qin; Brian Bettencourt; Dinah Sah; Rene Alvarez; Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev; Muthiah Manoharan; Kevin Fitzgerald; Rachel Meyers; Saraswathy V. Nochur; Maria João Saraiva; Tracy Zimmermann

Abstract ATTR amyloidosis is a systemic, debilitating and fatal disease caused by transthyretin (TTR) amyloid accumulation. RNA interference (RNAi) is a clinically validated technology that may be a promising approach to the treatment of ATTR amyloidosis. The vast majority of TTR, the soluble precursor of TTR amyloid, is expressed and synthesized in the liver. RNAi technology enables robust hepatic gene silencing, the goal of which would be to reduce systemic levels of TTR and mitigate many of the clinical manifestations of ATTR that arise from hepatic TTR expression. To test this hypothesis, TTR-targeting siRNAs were evaluated in a murine model of hereditary ATTR amyloidosis. RNAi-mediated silencing of hepatic TTR expression inhibited TTR deposition and facilitated regression of existing TTR deposits in pathologically relevant tissues. Further, the extent of deposit regression correlated with the level of RNAi-mediated knockdown. In comparison to the TTR stabilizer, tafamidis, RNAi-mediated TTR knockdown led to greater regression of TTR deposits across a broader range of affected tissues. Together, the data presented herein support the therapeutic hypothesis behind TTR lowering and highlight the potential of RNAi in the treatment of patients afflicted with ATTR amyloidosis.


ChemBioChem | 2016

5′‐(E)‐Vinylphosphonate: A Stable Phosphate Mimic Can Improve the RNAi Activity of siRNA–GalNAc Conjugates

Rubina Parmar; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Jingxuan Liu; Donald J. Foster; Benjamin Brigham; Christopher S. Theile; Klaus Charisse; Akin Akinc; Erin N. Guidry; Yi Pei; Walter Strapps; Mark Cancilla; Matthew G. Stanton; Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev; Laura Sepp-Lorenzino; Muthiah Manoharan; Rachel Meyers; Martin Maier; Vasant Jadhav

Small interfering RNA (siRNA)‐mediated silencing requires siRNA loading into the RNA‐induced silencing complex (RISC). Presence of 5′‐phosphate (5′‐P) is reported to be critical for efficient RISC loading of the antisense strand (AS) by anchoring it to the mid‐domain of the Argonaute2 (Ago2) protein. Phosphorylation of exogenous duplex siRNAs is thought to be accomplished by cytosolic Clp1 kinase. However, although extensive chemical modifications are essential for siRNA–GalNAc conjugate activity, they can significantly impair Clp1 kinase activity. Here, we further elucidated the effect of 5′‐P on the activity of siRNA–GalNAc conjugates. Our results demonstrate that a subset of sequences benefit from the presence of exogenous 5′‐P. For those that do, incorporation of 5′‐(E)‐vinylphosphonate (5′‐VP), a metabolically stable phosphate mimic, results in up to 20‐fold improved in vitro potency and up to a threefold benefit in in vivo activity by promoting Ago2 loading and enhancing metabolic stability.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Divergent effects of glucose and fructose on hepatic lipogenesis and insulin signaling

Samir Softic; Manoj Kumar Gupta; Guoxiao Wang; Shiho Fujisaka; Brian T. O’Neill; Tata Nageswara Rao; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Carole Harbison; Kevin Fitzgerald; Olga Ilkayeva; Christopher B. Newgard; David E. Cohen; C. Ronald Kahn

Overconsumption of high-fat diet (HFD) and sugar-sweetened beverages are risk factors for developing obesity, insulin resistance, and fatty liver disease. Here we have dissected mechanisms underlying this association using mice fed either chow or HFD with or without fructose- or glucose-supplemented water. In chow-fed mice, there was no major physiological difference between fructose and glucose supplementation. On the other hand, mice on HFD supplemented with fructose developed more pronounced obesity, glucose intolerance, and hepatomegaly as compared to glucose-supplemented HFD mice, despite similar caloric intake. Fructose and glucose supplementation also had distinct effects on expression of the lipogenic transcription factors ChREBP and SREBP1c. While both sugars increased ChREBP-&bgr;, fructose supplementation uniquely increased SREBP1c and downstream fatty acid synthesis genes, resulting in reduced liver insulin signaling. In contrast, glucose enhanced total ChREBP expression and triglyceride synthesis but was associated with improved hepatic insulin signaling. Metabolomic and RNA sequence analysis confirmed dichotomous effects of fructose and glucose supplementation on liver metabolism in spite of inducing similar hepatic lipid accumulation. Ketohexokinase, the first enzyme of fructose metabolism, was increased in fructose-fed mice and in obese humans with steatohepatitis. Knockdown of ketohexokinase in liver improved hepatic steatosis and glucose tolerance in fructose-supplemented mice. Thus, fructose is a component of dietary sugar that is distinctively associated with poor metabolic outcomes, whereas increased glucose intake may be protective.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

Impact of enhanced metabolic stability on pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of GalNAc–siRNA conjugates

Jayaprakash K. Nair; Husain Attarwala; Alfica Sehgal; Qianfan Wang; Krishna Aluri; Xuemei Zhang; Minggeng Gao; Ju Liu; Ramesh Indrakanti; Sally Schofield; Philip Kretschmer; Christopher R. Brown; Swati Gupta; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Julie A. Boshar; Vasant Jadhav; Klaus Charisse; Tracy Zimmermann; Kevin Fitzgerald; Muthiah Manoharan; Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev; Akin Akinc; Renta Hutabarat; Martin Maier

Abstract Covalent attachment of a synthetic triantennary N-acetylagalactosamine (GalNAc) ligand to chemically modified siRNA has enabled asialoglycoprotein (ASGPR)-mediated targeted delivery of therapeutically active siRNAs to hepatocytes in vivo. This approach has become transformative for the delivery of RNAi therapeutics as well as other classes of investigational oligonucleotide therapeutics to the liver. For efficient functional delivery of intact drug into the desired subcellular compartment, however, it is critical that the nucleic acids are stabilized against nucleolytic degradation. Here, we compared two siRNAs of the same sequence but with different modification pattern resulting in different degrees of protection against nuclease activity. In vitro stability studies in different biological matrices show that 5′-exonuclease is the most prevalent nuclease activity in endo-lysosomal compartments and that additional stabilization in the 5′-regions of both siRNA strands significantly enhances the overall metabolic stability of GalNAc–siRNA conjugates. In good agreement with in vitro findings, the enhanced stability translated into substantially improved liver exposure, gene silencing efficacy and duration of effect in mice. Follow-up studies with a second set of conjugates targeting a different transcript confirmed the previous results, provided additional insights into kinetics of RISC loading and demonstrated excellent translation to non-human primates.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

siRNA carrying an (E)-vinylphosphonate moiety at the 5΄ end of the guide strand augments gene silencing by enhanced binding to human Argonaute-2

Elad Elkayam; Rubina Parmar; Christopher R. Brown; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Christopher S. Theile; Muthiah Manoharan; Leemor Joshua-Tor

Abstract Efficient gene silencing by RNA interference (RNAi) in vivo requires the recognition and binding of the 5΄- phosphate of the guide strand of an siRNA by the Argonaute protein. However, for exogenous siRNAs it is limited by the rapid removal of the 5΄- phosphate of the guide strand by metabolic enzymes. Here, we have determined the crystal structure of human Argonaute-2 in complex with the metabolically stable 5΄-(E)-vinylphosphonate (5΄-E-VP) guide RNA at 2.5-Å resolution. The structure demonstrates how the 5΄ binding site in the Mid domain of human Argonaute-2 is able to adjust the key residues in the 5΄-nucleotide binding pocket to compensate for the change introduced by the modified nucleotide. This observation also explains improved binding affinity of the 5΄-E-VP -modified siRNA to human Argonaute-2 in-vitro, as well as the enhanced silencing in the context of the trivalent N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc)-conjugated siRNA in mice relative to the un-modified siRNA.


Molecular Therapy | 2018

Evaluation of GalNAc-siRNA Conjugate Activity in Pre-clinical Animal Models with Reduced Asialoglycoprotein Receptor Expression

Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Amy Chan; Alfica Sehgal; James Butler; Jayaprakash K. Nair; Tim Racie; Svetlana Shulga-Morskaya; Tuyen Nguyen; Kun Qian; Kristina Yucius; Klaus Charisse; Theo J.C. van Berkel; Muthiah Manoharan; Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev; Martin Maier; Vasant Jadhav; Tracy Zimmermann

The hepatocyte-specific asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR) is an ideal candidate for targeted drug delivery to the liver due to its high capacity for substrate clearance from circulation together with its well-conserved expression and function across species. The development of GalNAc-siRNA conjugates, in which a synthetic triantennary N-acetylgalactosamine-based ligand is conjugated to chemically modified siRNA, has enabled efficient, ASGPR-mediated delivery to hepatocytes. To investigate the potential impact of variations in receptor expression on the efficiency of GalNAc-siRNA conjugate delivery, we evaluated the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of GalNAc-siRNA conjugates in multiple pre-clinical models with reduced receptor expression. Despite greater than 50% reduction in ASGPR levels, GalNAc conjugate activity was retained, suggesting that the remaining receptor capacity was sufficient to mediate efficient uptake of potent GalNAc-siRNAs at pharmacologically relevant dose levels. Collectively, our data support a broad application of the GalNAc-siRNA technology for hepatic targeting, including disease states where ASGPR expression may be reduced.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

siRNA Conjugates Carrying Sequentially Assembled Trivalent N-Acetylgalactosamine Linked Through Nucleosides Elicit Robust Gene Silencing In Vivo in Hepatocytes

Shigeo Matsuda; Kristofer Keiser; Jayaprakash K. Nair; Klaus Charisse; Rajar M. Manoharan; Philip Kretschmer; Chang G. Peng; Alexander V. Kel’in; Pachamuthu Kandasamy; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby; Abigail Liebow; William Querbes; Kristina Yucius; Tuyen Nguyen; Martin Maier; Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev; Muthiah Manoharan


Archive | 2015

KETOHEXOKINASE (KHK) iRNA COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS OF USE THEREOF

Kevin Fitzgerald; Brian Bettencourt; Gregory Hinkle; Jennifer L. S. Willoughby

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Martin Maier

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals

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Akin Akinc

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals

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