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Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Decorated with Functional Peptides for a Targeted siRNA Delivery to Glioma Cells.

Seokhwan ChungYutaro SugimotoJianxi HuangMiqin Zhang
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Glioma is a deadly form of brain cancer, and the difficulty of treating glioma is exacerbated by the chemotherapeutic resistance developed in the tumor cells over the time of treatment. siRNA can be used to silence the gene responsible for the increased resistance, and sensitize the glioma cells to drugs. Here, iron oxide nanoparticles functionalized with peptides (NP-CTX-R 10 ) were used to deliver siRNA to silence O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) to sensitize tumor cells to alkylating drug, Temozolomide (TMZ). The NP-CTX-R 10 could complex with siRNA through electrostatic interactions and was able to deliver the siRNA to different glioma cells. The targeting ligand chlorotoxin and cell penetrating peptide polyarginine (R 10 ) enhanced the transfection capability of siRNA to a level comparable to commercially available Lipofectamine. The NP-siRNA was able to achieve up to 90% gene silencing. Glioma cells transfected with NP-siRNA targeting MGMT showed significantly elevated sensitivity to TMZ treatment. This nanoparticle formulation demonstrates the ability to protect siRNA from degradation and to efficiently deliver the siRNA to induce therapeutic gene knockdown.
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