Oligonucleotide Biopolymers – Future Challenges for Chromatography

Chromatography

Oligonucleotide Biopolymers – Future Challenges for Chromatography

11 May, 2011

Published over 15 years ago. See the latest and most current information on Chromatography.

George Okafo, Daren S Levin and David Elder
1 min read
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Synthetic Oligonucleotides as Therapeutic Medicines

Synthetic oligonucleotides are an exciting new class of biomolecules capable of treating many disorders, which are currently not amenable to existing drugs, including viral infections [1], respiratory disorders [2], cancers [3] and rare diseases [4]. Current interest has been largely fuelled by two key events: firstly, Fire and Mello’s Nobel-prize winning discovery of gene silencing by RNA interference (which helped to improve our understanding of the genetic basis of many diseases) [5]; and secondly, the regulatory approval of two oligonucleotide-based drugs, namely Vitravene® [6] (a 21-base single stranded antisense oligonucleotide approved by the FDA in 1998 for cytomegalovirus infections) and Macugen® [7] (a pegylated aptamer approved in 2005 for treating wet macular degeneration).

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