Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine
Volume 15, Issue 1 , Pages 41-45, January 2005

The potential of aptamers as anticoagulants

  • Shahid M. Nimjee

      Affiliations

    • University Program of Genetics, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
    • Department of Surgery, Division of Experimental Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
  • ,
  • Christopher P. Rusconi

      Affiliations

    • Department of Surgery, Division of Experimental Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
    • Regado Biosciences Inc., Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA
  • ,
  • Robert A. Harrington

      Affiliations

    • Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
  • ,
  • Bruce A. Sullenger

      Affiliations

    • University Program of Genetics, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
    • Department of Surgery, Division of Experimental Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to: Bruce A. Sullenger, Box 2601 DUMC, Durham, NC 27710, USA. Tel.: (+1) 919-684-6344

Useful additional options for anticoagulant therapy have been introduced over the last 15 years, including low-molecular-weight heparins and direct thrombin inhibitors. Despite these impressive advances, a need for safer effective anticoagulants remains. Aptamers represent a therapeutic modality that has the potential to address this unmet need. Aptamers are small nucleic acid molecules that function as direct protein inhibitors, much like monoclonal antibodies. Aptamers are delivered by parenteral administration, can be formulated to possess a very short or sustained half-life, and are purported to be nonimmunogenic. Perhaps most relevant to the development of safer anticoagulant therapies, recent studies have shown that antidotes can be rationally designed to control the pharmacologic effects of aptamers in vivo, paving the way for a new class of antidote-controlled therapeutics. This review discusses the limitations of current anticoagulant therapies, the properties of aptamers and how these properties can be exploited to address the unmet needs within this therapeutic class, and the progress to date in developing new aptamer-based anticoagulant therapies.

 

PII: S1050-1738(05)00003-4

doi:10.1016/j.tcm.2005.01.002

Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine
Volume 15, Issue 1 , Pages 41-45, January 2005