Hassan H Fakih, Qi Tang, Ashley Summers, Katherine Y Gross, Mohamad Omar Rachid, Ken Okamura, Nuria Martinez, Hanadi F Sleiman, John E Harris, Anastasia Khvorova
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Albumin-binding dendritic siRNA improves delivery and efficacy to solid tumors in a melanoma model.
Small interfering RNA (siRNA) therapeutics are a new class of drugs that is rapidly expanding to tackle various diseases. Extrahepatic delivery of siRNAs, especially to the parenchyma of solid tumors, is challenging with multiple strategies being explored such as lipid nanoparticle based delivery and ligand conjugation strategies. Here, we report that an albumin-binding dendritic siRNA (D-siRNA) boosts blood circulation time following systemic administration, leading to improved delivery and silencing activity in a melanoma tumor model, in comparison to non-albumin binding lipophilic siRNAs. D-siRNAs increased the tumor-to-liver delivery ratio, including both immune and non-immune cell types within the tumor parenchyma. Using D-siRNAs to target JAK1 expression as an adjuvant to immune checkpoint inhibitors, we found that D-siRNAs was able to enhance PD1 antibody treatment and slow tumor progression of melanoma. Thus, this work demonstrates the utility of D-siRNAs as a systemically administered tumor delivery strategy, enabling the use of siRNAs as chemotherapeutic agents. Further mechanistic studies into the role of JAK1 in melanoma pathology and progression may expand this into additional targets as potential treatments.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Therapy Nucleic Acids is an international, open-access journal that publishes high-quality research in nucleic-acid-based therapeutics to treat and correct genetic and acquired diseases. It is the official journal of the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy and is built upon the success of Molecular Therapy. The journal focuses on gene- and oligonucleotide-based therapies and publishes peer-reviewed research, reviews, and commentaries. Its impact factor for 2022 is 8.8. The subject areas covered include the development of therapeutics based on nucleic acids and their derivatives, vector development for RNA-based therapeutics delivery, utilization of gene-modifying agents like Zn finger nucleases and triplex-forming oligonucleotides, pre-clinical target validation, safety and efficacy studies, and clinical trials.