Treatment of Melanoma by Nano-conjugate-Delivered Wee1 siRNA.
Xueyan ZhangAnqi CaiYan GaoYuanfa ZhangXingmei DuanKe MenPublished in: Molecular pharmaceutics (2021)
Small interfering RNA (siRNA)-based drugs have shown tremendous potential to date in cancer gene therapy. Despite the considerable efforts in siRNA design and manufacturing, unsatisfactory delivery systems persist as a limitation for the application of siRNA-based drugs. In this work, the cholesterol, cell-penetrating peptide conjugate cRGD (R8-cRGD), and polyethylene glycol (PEG) were introduced into low-molecular-weight polyethyleneimine (LMW PEI) to form cRGD-R9-cholesterol-PEI-PEG (RRCPP) nanoparticles with specific targeting and highly penetrating abilities. The enhanced siRNA uptake efficiency of the RRCPP delivery system benefited from R8-cRGD modification. Wee1 is an oncogenic nuclear kinase that can regulate the cell cycle as a crucial G2/M checkpoint. Overexpression of Wee1 in melanoma may lead to a poor prognosis. In the present study, RRCPP nanoparticles were designed for Wee1 siRNA delivery to form an RRCPP/siWee1 complex, which significantly silenced the expression of the WEE1 gene (>60% inhibition) and induced B16 tumor cell apoptosis by abrogating the G2M checkpoint and DNA damage in vitro. Furthermore, the RRCPP/siWee1 complex suppressed B16 tumor growth in a subcutaneous xenograft model (nearly 85% inhibition rate) and lung metastasis (nearly 66% inhibition rate) with ideal in vivo safety. Briefly, our results support the validity of RRCPP as a potential Wee1 siRNA carrier for melanoma gene therapy.
Keyphrases
- cancer therapy
- cell cycle
- poor prognosis
- gene therapy
- dna damage
- drug delivery
- cell proliferation
- long non coding rna
- hyaluronic acid
- squamous cell carcinoma
- transcription factor
- single cell
- stem cells
- genome wide
- high glucose
- dna methylation
- squamous cell
- lymph node metastasis
- climate change
- risk assessment
- childhood cancer
- protein kinase