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Harnessing RNAi-based nanomedicines for therapeutic gene silencing in B-cell malignancies

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2016

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National Academy of Sciences
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Weinstein, Shiri, Itai A. Toker, Rafi Emmanuel, Srinivas Ramishetti, Inbal Hazan-Halevy, Daniel Rosenblum, Meir Goldsmith, et al. 2015. “Harnessing RNAi-Based Nanomedicines for Therapeutic Gene Silencing in B-Cell Malignancies.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113 (1): E16–22. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1519273113.

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Abstract

Despite progress in systemic small interfering RNA (siRNA) delivery to the liver and to solid tumors, systemic siRNA delivery to leukocytes remains challenging. The ability to silence gene expression in leukocytes has great potential for identifying drug targets and for RNAi-based therapy for leukocyte diseases. However, both normal and malignant leukocytes are among the most difficult targets for siRNA delivery as they are resistant to conventional transfection reagents and are dispersed in the body. We used mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) as a prototypic blood cancer for validating a novel siRNA delivery strategy. MCL is an aggressive B-cell lymphoma that overexpresses cyclin D1 with relatively poor prognosis. Downregulation of cyclin D1 using RNA interference (RNAi) is a potential therapeutic approach to this malignancy. Here, we designed lipid-based nanoparticles (LNPs) coated with anti-CD38 monoclonal antibodies that are specifically taken up by human MCL cells in the bone marrow of xenografted mice. When loaded with siRNAs against cyclin D1, CD38-targeted LNPs induced gene silencing in MCL cells and prolonged survival of tumor-bearing mice with no observed adverse effects. These results highlight the therapeutic potential of cyclin D1 therapy in MCL and present a novel RNAi delivery system that opens new therapeutic opportunities for treating MCL and other B-cell malignancies.

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