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Miravirsen

Miravirsen
Miravirsen.png
Clinical data
Routes of
administration
Intravenous or subcutaneous injection
ATC code
  • none
Legal status
Legal status
  • Investigational
Identifiers
Synonyms SPC3649
CAS Number
PubChem CID
UNII
Chemical and physical data
Formula C151H185N49O83P14S14
Molar mass 4,896.87 g·mol−1
3D model (JSmol)

Miravirsen (INN; codenamed SPC3649) is an experimental drug for the treatment of hepatitis C, being developed by Santaris Pharma.

Miravirsen is a short modified RNA molecule that is applied by intravenous or subcutaneous injection. It reaches the liver and binds to the human microRNA called miR-122; this mechanism makes it an antisense RNA. Miravirsen can also bind to the precursors of miR-122 with nanomolar affinity, inhibiting its biogenesis. The hepatitis C virus needs miR-122 to multiply, but cannot utilise it if bound by miravirsen.

As miR-122 has tumour protective properties in liver cells, concerns about a possible risk of hepatic cancer have been voiced. The drug did not induce liver toxicity in non-human primates, nor in a human study.

Miravirsen is a modified oligonucleotide consisting of a chain of 15 nucleotides, the base sequence of which is designed to selectively bind to miR-122. Seven of the 15 sugar units are desoxyriboses, and the other eight are riboses with an additional bridge between the 2' oxygen and the 4' carbon atoms; this makes the molecule a locked nucleic acid. Furthermore, the phosphate units have been replaced by thiophosphates.

The complete base sequence is

with 3'→5' thiophosphate linkages.

Miravirsen reduced HCV viremia in a small-scale trial in chimpanzees and was found to be safe in a clinical trial in 27 humans over eight to eleven weeks.


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