A development that may evolve into a revolution in medicine: mRNA as the basis for novel, nucleotide-based vaccines and drugs

Ther Adv Vaccines. 2014 Jan;2(1):10-31. doi: 10.1177/2051013613508729.

Abstract

Recent advances strongly suggest that mRNA rather than DNA will be the nucleotide basis for a new class of vaccines and drugs. Therapeutic cancer vaccines against a variety of targets have been developed on this basis and initial clinical experience suggests that preclinical activity can be successfully translated to human application. Likewise, prophylactic vaccines against viral pathogens and allergens have demonstrated their activity in animal models. These successes could be extended preclinically to mRNA protein and gene replacement therapy as well as the induction of pluripotent stem cells by mRNA encoded transcription factors. The production of mRNA-based vaccines and drugs is highly flexible, scalable and cost competitive, and eliminates the requirement of a cold chain. mRNA-based drugs and vaccines offer all the advantages of a nucleotide-based approach at reduced costs and represent a truly disruptive technology that may start a revolution in medicine.

Keywords: RNActive vaccines; mRNA-based vaccines; replicons; therapeutic mRNA.

Publication types

  • Review