| Literature DB >> 22685651 |
S Catuogno1, C L Esposito, C Quintavalle, G Condorelli, V de Franciscis, L Cerchia.
Abstract
Gliomas are the most common primary central nervous system tumors with a dismal prognosis. Despite recent advances in surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy, current treatment regimens have a modest survival benefit. A crucial challenge is to deliver drugs effectively to invasive glioma cells residing in a sanctuary within the central nervous system. New therapies are essential, and oligonucleotide-based approaches, including antisense, microRNAs, small interfering RNAs, and nucleic acid aptamers, may provide a viable strategy. Thanks to their unique characteristics (low size, good affinity for the target, no immunogenicity, chemical structures that can be easily modified to improve their in vivo applications), these molecules may represent a valid alternative to antibodies particularly to overcome challenges presented by the blood-brain barrier. Here we will discuss recent results on the use of oligonucleotides that will hopefully provide new effective treatment for gliomas.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22685651 PMCID: PMC3364599 DOI: 10.1155/2012/735135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Signal Transduct ISSN: 2090-1747
Figure 1Mechanism of action of nucleic acids. AS-ODN, miRNAs, and siRNAs act on the mRNA preventing proteins translation. Nucleic acid aptamers fold into complex tridimensional shapes that allow direct binding to target protein.
Advantages and disadvantages of microRNAs, siRNAs, and aptamers.
| miRNAs | siRNAs | Aptamers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Advantages | (i) Chemically synthesized | (i) Chemically synthesized | (i) Chemically synthesized |
| (ii) Small size | (ii) Small size | (ii) Small size | |
| (iii) Sufficiently stable | (iii) Sufficiently stable | (iii) High target selectivity | |
| (iv) Can be readily chemically modified | (iv) Can be readily chemically modified | (iv) High affinity | |
| (v) Less immunogenic than proteins | (v) Less immunogenic than proteins | (v) Sufficiently stable | |
| (vi) Already developed in clinical trials | (vi) Can be readily chemically modified | ||
| (vii) Less immunogenic than proteins | |||
| (viii) Already developed in clinic | |||
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| Disadvantages | (i) Off-target effects | Off-target effects | Only a few aptamers as targeting agents for imaging |
Figure 2Scheme of mi/si RNA processing pathway. MiRNAs are first transcribed into long primary miRNAs (pri-miRNAs) by polymerase II or, in few rare cases, by polymerase III. Primary miRNAs are cleaved in the nucleus by an RNAse III enzyme, Drosha, inducing the conversion into precursor miRNAs (pre-miRNAs). Pre-miRNAs are transported into the cytoplasm by exportin-5 and subsequently processed by Dicer, a cytoplasmic endonuclease RNAse III enzyme, that generates a miRNA duplex. The functional strand of the mature miRNA is then incorporated into the RISC (RNA-induced silencing complex), that mediates the degradation or the translation inhibition of the target mRNA. For siRNA-mediated RNAi, double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs) are chemically synthesized and then introduced into cell. dsRNAs are directly cleaved into small double-stranded siRNAs by Dicer and then incorporated into the RISC leading to target mRNA degradation.
MicroRNAs implicated in glioma.
| miRNA | Function | Location | Targets | Cluster | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oncomir | miR-21 | Inhibits apoptosis and promotes invasion | Chr 17 intergenic | TP53BP2 [ | |
| miR-221 | Promotes proliferation and invasion | Chr X intergenic | PTP | miR-221/222 | |
| miR-222 | Promotes proliferation and invasion | Chr X intergenic | PTP | miR-221/222 | |
| miR-9 | Inhibits neural differentiation and induce proliferation | Chr 9 | CAMTA1 [ | ||
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| |||||
| Tumor suppressor | miR-124 | Induces G0/G1 cell cycle arrest; induce differentiation of adult mouse neural stem cells | Chr 8 | CDK6 [ | |
| miR-137 | Induces G0/G1 cell cycle arrest; induces differentiation of adult mouse neural stem cells | Chr 1 | CDK6 [ | miR-137/2682 | |
| miR-7 | Tumor suppressor; suppresses EGFR expression and independently inhibits Akt pathway | Chr 9 | EGFR [ | ||
| miR-128 | Inhibits cell proliferation by targeting Bmi-1 and E2F3a | Chr 2 | E2F3A | ||
| miR-181 | Is downregulated and associated with poor prognosis | Chr 9 | unknown | miR-181a/b | |
Strategies for siRNA delivery across the BBB.
| Delivery system | siRNA target | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Pegylated immunoliposomes | EGFR | [ |
| siRNA/TfR antibody complexes by biotin-streptavidin bridge | Luciferase | [ |
| Polyethylenimine/siRNA complexes | Pleiotrophin | [ |
| Nanoparticles/siRNA complexes | HIF-1 | [ |
| Recombinant adeno-associated virus | Hec1 | [ |
| Herpes simplex virus 1 | EGFR; Rad51 | [ |
| Lentiviral vectors | shBcl-2 and S-TRAIL | [ |
Figure 3Scheme of SELEX technology. The starting point of the SELEX technology for aptamers production is the synthesis of a high complexity ssDNA/RNA library containing a variable region flanked by two constant regions. At each SELEX round the library is incubated with the target molecule and bound aptamers are recovered and amplified. At the end of the selection process, the PCR products are cloned and sequenced.