The poly(A) tail of mRNA plays a vital role in mRNA transcript stability, translational efficiency, and immunogenicity. Co-transcriptionally polyadenylated in vitro transcribed (IVT) mRNAs typically contain poly(A) tails of 50–120 nucleotide tail length due to limitations in production of template pDNA with longer poly(A) sequences. In contrast, post-transcriptional enzymatic polyadenylation of mRNA with poly(A) polymerase (PAP) presents a modular alternative to increase the tail length. However, the lack of real-time control strategies for PAP-mediated tailing has limited its broader applicability in mRNA production. Here, we develop a methodology for controlling poly(A) tail length in post-transcriptional polyadenylation of mRNA that uses adenosine triphosphate (ATP) consumption measured at-line to predict the poly(A) tail length. We establish a novel analytical method based on monolith reverse-phase chromatography to validate the poly(A) predictions. We were able to produce longer poly(A) tails and accurately determine their length in 300–700 nt range. The resulting longer poly(A) tailed reporter mRNAs outperformed the encoded and shorter poly(A) tailed mRNAs in cell-based assays. This work presents a new strategy for controlled post-transcriptional polyadenylation using ATP consumption as a process control metric, an approach which may in future be expanded to other NTP-dependent enzymatic conversions.
Skok et al. (Tue,) studied this question.