Litcius/Paper detail

Development of Kilogram-Scale Convergent Liquid-Phase Synthesis of Oligonucleotides

Xuan Zhou, William F. Kiesman, Wuming Yan, Hong Jiang, Firoz D. Antia, Jing Yang, Yannick Fillon, Xiao Li, Xianglin Shi

2021The Journal of Organic Chemistry54 citationsDOI

Abstract

Oligonucleotide drugs show promise to treat diseases afflicting millions of people. To address the need to manufacture large quantities of oligonucleotide therapeutics, the novel convergent liquid-phase synthesis has been developed for an 18-mer oligonucleotide drug candidate. Fragments containing tetra- and pentamers were synthesized and assembled into the 18-mer without column chromatography, which had a similar impurity profile to material made by standard solid-phase oligonucleotide synthesis. Two of the fragments have been synthesized at ∼3 kg/batch sizes and four additional tetra- and pentamer fragments were synthesized at >300-g scale, and a 34-mer was assembled from the fragments. Critical impurities are controlled in the fragment syntheses to provide oligonucleotides of purities suitable for clinical use after applying standard full-length product purification process. Impurity control in the assembly steps demonstrated the potential to eliminate chromatography of full-length oligonucleotides, which should enhance scalability and reduce the environmental impact of the process. The convergent assembly and telescoping of reactions made the long synthesis (>60 reactions) practical by reducing production time, material loss, and chances for impurity generation.

Topics & Concepts

OligonucleotideChemistryImpurityPentamerChromatographyCombinatorial chemistryOligonucleotide synthesisPhase (matter)Organic chemistryDNABiochemistryAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesDNA and Nucleic Acid ChemistryRNA Interference and Gene Delivery