Login / Signup

Switching the intracellular pathway and enhancing the therapeutic efficacy of small interfering RNA by auroliposome.

Md Nazir HossenLin WangHarisha R ChinthalapallyJ David RobertsonKar-Ming FungStefan WilhelmMagdalena BieniaszResham BhattacharyaPriyabrata Mukherjee
Published in: Science advances (2020)
Gene silencing using small-interfering RNA (siRNA) is a viable therapeutic approach; however, the lack of effective delivery systems limits its clinical translation. Herein, we doped conventional siRNA-liposomal formulations with gold nanoparticles to create "auroliposomes," which significantly enhanced gene silencing. We targeted MICU1, a novel glycolytic switch in ovarian cancer, and delivered MICU1-siRNA using three delivery systems-commercial transfection agents, conventional liposomes, and auroliposomes. Low-dose siRNA via transfection or conventional liposomes was ineffective for MICU1 silencing; however, in auroliposomes, the same dose gave >85% gene silencing. Efficacy was evident from both in vitro growth assays of ovarian cancer cells and in vivo tumor growth in human ovarian cell line-and patient-derived xenograft models. Incorporation of gold nanoparticles shifted intracellular uptake pathways such that liposomes avoided degradation within lysosomes. Auroliposomes were nontoxic to vital organs. Therefore, auroliposomes represent a novel siRNA delivery system with superior efficacy for multiple therapeutic applications.
Keyphrases
  • cancer therapy
  • gold nanoparticles
  • drug delivery
  • low dose
  • drug release
  • endothelial cells
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • high dose
  • quantum dots
  • high throughput
  • single cell
  • pluripotent stem cells