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mRNA medicine: Recent progresses in chemical modification, design, and engineering

Xiaowen Hou, Jinjun Shi, Yuling Xiao

2024Nano Research14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Messenger RNA (mRNA) is a type of RNA that carries genetic information from DNA to the ribosome, where it is translated into proteins. mRNA has emerged as a powerful platform for development of new types of medicine, especially after the clinical approval of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines. Chemical modification and nanoparticle delivery have contributed to this success significantly by improving mRNA stability, reducing its immunogenicity, protecting it from enzymatic degradation, and enhancing cellular uptake and endosomal escape. Recently, substantial progresses have been made in new modification chemistries, sequence design, and structural engineering to generate more stable and efficient next-generation mRNAs. These innovations could further facilitate the clinical translation of mRNA therapies and vaccines. Given that numerous review articles have been published on mRNA nanoparticle delivery and biomedical applications over the last few years, we herein focus on overviewing recent advances in mRNA chemical modification, mRNA sequence optimization, and mRNA engineering (e.g., circular RNA and multitailed mRNA), with the aim of providing new perspectives on the development of more effective and safer mRNA medicines.

Topics & Concepts

Messenger RNARNATranslation (biology)ImmunogenicityRibosomeComputational biologyChemistryNanotechnologyCell biologyBiologyBiochemistryGeneMaterials scienceGeneticsImmune systemRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryRNA modifications and cancerRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
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