Citation

  • Authors: Coch, C., Stumpel, J. P., Lilien-Waldau, V., Wohlleber, D., Kummerer, B. M., Bekeredjian-Ding, I., Kochs, G., Garbi, N., Herberhold, S., Schuberth-Wagner, C., Ludwig, J., Barchet, W., Schlee, M., Hoerauf, A., Bootz, F., Staeheli, P., Hartmann, G., Hartmann, E.
  • Year: 2017
  • Journal: Mol Ther 25 2093-2103
  • Applications: in vivo / 5'-PPP-dsRNA / in vivo-jetPEI

Method

5'pppRNA was complexed to in vivo-jetPEI and administered to mice intravenously using in vivo-jetPEI in an N/P ratio of 8.

Abstract

Influenza A virus infection causes substantial morbidity and mortality in seasonal epidemic outbreaks, and more efficient treatments are urgently needed. Innate immune sensing of viral nucleic acids stimulates antiviral immunity, including cell-autonomous antiviral defense mechanisms that restrict viral replication. RNA oligonucleotide ligands that potently activate the cytoplasmic helicase retinoic-acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I) are promising candidates for the development of new antiviral therapies. Here, we demonstrate in an Mx1-expressing mouse model of influenza A virus infection that a single intravenous injection of low-dose RIG-I ligand 5'-triphosphate RNA (3pRNA) completely protected mice from a lethal challenge with influenza A virus for at least 7 days. Furthermore, systemic administration of 3pRNA rescued mice with pre-established fulminant influenza infection and prevented the fatal effects of a streptococcal superinfection. Type I interferon, but not interferon-lambda, was required for the therapeutic effect. Our results suggest that the use of RIG-I activating oligonucleotide ligands has the clinical potential to confine influenza epidemics when a strain-specific vaccine is not yet available and to reduce lethality of influenza in severely infected patients.

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