| Literature DB >> 20625420 |
Antonio Strillacci1, Cristiana Griffoni, Maria Chiara Valerii, Giorgia Lazzarini, Vittorio Tomasi, Enzo Spisni.
Abstract
Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) enzyme has been involved in the tumorigenesis and in the progression of colorectal cancer (CRC). The use of traditional nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or selective COX-2 inhibitors has been proposed for the prevention and the treatment of this relevant neoplastic disease. In the light of an innovative alternative to these pharmacological approaches, we review here the possible strategies to achieve a strong and selective inhibition of COX-2 enzyme by using the mechanism of RNA Interference (RNAi) targeted against its mRNA. Anti-COX-2 siRNA molecules (siCOX-2) can be generated in CRC cells from short hairpin RNA (shRNA) precursors, delivered in vitro by a retroviral expression system, and induce a significant and stable silencing of overexpressed COX-2 in human colon cancer cells. As a safer alternative to viral approach, nonpathogenic bacteria (E. coli) can be engineered to invade eukaryotic cells and to generate siCOX-2 molecules in cancer cells. Moreover, the involvement of miRNAs in COX-2 posttranscriptional regulation opens up the possibility to exploit an endogenous silencing mechanism to knockdown overexpressed COX-2. Thus, these recent strategies disclose new challenging perspectives for the development of clinically compatible siRNA or miRNA capable of selectively inhibiting COX-2 enzyme.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20625420 PMCID: PMC2896898 DOI: 10.1155/2010/828045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
COX-2 silencing mediated by RNAi.
| Study | Model | RNAi-silencing | Effects | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Denkert et al. 2003 | OVCAR-3 cells ( | siCOX-2 ( | - COX-2 protein silencing | |
| - Reduction of PGE2 levels | [ | |||
| - No effects on cell proliferation | ||||
| Strillacci et al. 2006 | HUVECs ( | siCOX-2 ( | - COX-2 protein silencing | |
| - Reduction of 6-keto- PGF2 | ||||
| - Reduction of capillary-like tubular | [ | |||
| structures on 3D collagen gel | ||||
| - No effects on interferon system | ||||
| Strillacci et al. 2006 | HT-29 cells ( | shCOX-2 ( | - COX-2 protein and mRNA silencing | |
| - Reduction of PGE2 levels | ||||
| - No effects on interferon system | [ | |||
| - No effects on cell proliferation | ||||
| - Impairment of malignant behavior | ||||
| Charames and Bapat 2006 | HT-29 cells ( | siCOX-2 ( | - COX-2 protein and mRNA silencing | [ |
| - No effects on cell apoptosis | ||||
| Kobayashi et al. 2007 | CG cells ( | siCOX-2 ( | - COX-2 mRNA silencing | [ |
| - Reduction of PGF2 | ||||
| Wang et al. 2008 | Hep-2 cells ( | shCOX-2 ( | - COX-2 protein and mRNA silencing | |
| - Inhibition of proliferation | ||||
| - Impairment of malignant behavior | [ | |||
| - Inhibition of in vivo growth | ||||
| - Enhanced chemosensitivity in vitro and in vivo | ||||
| Sansone et al. 2008 | HT-29 cells ( | shCOX-2 ( | - COX-2 protein and mRNA silencing | |
| - Inhibition of Erk phosphorilation | ||||
| - Inhibition of CA-IX expression | ||||
| - Inhibition of cell invasion | [ | |||
| - Inhibition of MMP-2 activation | ||||
| - No effects on cell death | ||||
| - Inhibition of hypoxic survival | ||||
Figure 1COX-2 silencing mediated by transkingdom RNAi. The cotransformation of E. coli with both plasmids pGB2Ωinv-hly and pSUPER.retroshCOX-2 enables bacteria to induce the transkingdom RNAi phenomenon in colon cancer cells. Following the expression of the bacterial proteins invasin and listeriolysin-O, engineered E. coli strains are able to permeate human cells and release the plasmid DNA content. Anti-COX-2 shRNAs are then transcribed by the cellular machinery, resulting in an efficient COX-2 silencing.
Figure 2Invasive tkColi infect CRC HT-29 cells and promote high COX-2 silencing associated with a reduced invasive behavior. E. coli was cotransformed with pGB2-Ω-inv-hly plasmid and pSUPER.retro vectors to obtain E. coli invasive strains carrying the shCOX-2 expression vector tkColi-pSTBE (in which shCOX-2 expression is controlled by TBE promoter carrying Tcf Binding Elements). The negative control was tkColi-pS-(not expressing shCOX2 but containing the original empty pSUPER.retro vector). GFP protein expression (a) was used to evaluate the efficiency of tkColi infection of HT-29 cells (bar = 30 μm). 72 hours after the infection, the efficiency of infection was higher than 75%. The expressions of COX-2 protein and COX-2 mRNA were analyzed in HT-29 cells, 72 hours after tkColi infection, by Western blot and real-time PCR (c). COX-2 protein and COX-2 mRNA expressions were normalized against β-actin protein and GUSB (β-glucuronidase) mRNA levels, respectively. Relative expression of COX-2 protein and COX-2 mRNA refers to tkColi-pS-infected sample. The invasive behavior of tkColi infected CRC HT-29 cells was evaluated by using Boyden chambers and 8-μm polycarbonate membranes coated with Matrigel. Samples were tested in the absence (dark bars) and in the presence (light bars) of PMA 40 nM. Relative invasion index refers to HT-29 cells infected with tkColi-pS-, not treated with PMA. Data reported in (b)–(d) represent the mean ± SEM of three independent experiments; *P < .01.
Anti-COX-2 miRNAs.
| Study | miRNAs | Model | Function | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chakrabarty et al. 2007 | mmu-miR 199a* mmu-miR-101a | mouse | - Correlate inversely with COX-2 protein |
[ |
| during embryo implantation | ||||
| - Regulate COX-2 protein expression | ||||
| Daikoku et al. 2008 | mmu-miR-199a* mmu-miR-101a | mouse | - Correlate inversely with COX-2 protein |
[ |
| in endometrial cancer cells | ||||
| Strillacci et al. 2008 | hsa-miR-101 | homo | - Correlates inversely with COX-2 protein |
[ |
| in colon cancer cells | ||||
| - Regulates COX-2 protein expression | ||||
| (translational repression) | ||||
| Shanmugam et al. 2008 | hsa-miR-16 | homo | - Promotes COX-2 mRNA degradation in |
[ |
| THP-1 monocytic cells | ||||
Figure 3The different strategies for COX-2 blockade. (a) COX-2 selective NSAIDs (e.g., celecoxib, rofecoxib, etoricoxib) represent to date the only drugs marketed for COX-2 selective inhibition, even if rofecoxib has been withdrawn due to its toxicity; (b) inhibitors of transcriptional factors expression and/or activity (e.g., C/EBPβ transactivator) may block COX-2 overexpression associated to inflammation or cancer; (c) anti-COX-2 siRNAs (siCOX-2) or miRNAs (e.g., miR-101) with structural modifications that improve their stability may block COX-2 expression after intravenous administration; (d) polymer- or lipid-based delivery systems protect siRNAs or miRNA from the extracellular environment and, modifying their shell, a more selective cellular targeting can be obtained; (e) nonpathogenic bacteria (E. coli) can be engineered in order to invade target cells and induce RNAi against COX-2 (transkingdom RNAi, tkRNAi) by releasing DNA plasmids that express siCOX-2 or miR-101 precursors; (f) anti-COX-2 shRNA (shCOX-2) or pre-miRNA expression cassettes can be transduced into target cells genome by the use of recombinant retroviruses, allowing a stable COX-2 silencing into mammalian cells.