Literature DB >> 23344178

Rolling Circle Transcription of Tandem siRNA to Generate Spherulitic RNA Nanoparticles for Cell Entry.

Peixuan Guo1.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 23344178      PMCID: PMC3437802          DOI: 10.1038/mtna.2012.31

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ther Nucleic Acids        ISSN: 2162-2531            Impact factor:   10.183


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Small interfering RNA (siRNA) holds great promise as a simple, yet powerful therapeutic strategy to knockdown the function of a particular gene. However, the major obstacle to the use of siRNA in clinical applications is the lack of an effective delivery system. Much effort has concentrated on developing methods to package or encapsulate siRNA with polymers or lipids. In a recent issue of Nature Materials, Paula Hammond and coworkers present an innovative approach to siRNA delivery based on the production of dense RNA “microsponges” that contain more than a half million copies of an siRNA precursor.[1] The morphology of these microsponges resembles that of spherulites: assemblies of linear polymers in which highly ordered pleated lamellar sheets, interspersed with amorphous regions, radiate outward from a nucleating core to form a roughly spherical aggregate. The innovative strategy demonstrates improvements in RNA production, payload encapsulation, and transport and cell entry. Many approaches have been employed to tackle the siRNA delivery issue, but challenges remain. These include the issues of chemical and thermodynamic instability, short in vivo half-life, unfavorable biodistribution, low yield, high production cost, in vivo toxicity and side effects, a lack of specific targeting, and inefficient endosomal escape. The recent application of RNA nanotechnology[2] has shown promise for enhanced RNA stability,[3,4] extended half life,[5] and reduced toxicity.[5] RNA/DNA nanotechnology has also enabled the 3D arrangement of multiple folate ligands to enhance folate receptor-binding so as to increase delivery of siRNA to cancerous cells.[6] Nevertheless, vector production, cell entry, and endosomal escape remain challenging. RNA is a “polynucleic acid”, but its polymeric nature in material and technology applications is often overlooked due to the misconception that it is very unstable. The linear and multimeric properties of RNA are very similar to those of conventional polymers, and RNA strands can be assembled in a controlled and predictive fashion to generate nanoparticles with defined structure and stoichiometry. To date, these properties have been exploited to design and manufacture a variety of polyvalent nanoparticles having distinct structures.[2] Hammond and colleagues have departed from this approach to nanoparticle design and production with an innovative strategy that generates monodisperse spherulitic RNA nanoparticles from extremely high molecular weight RNA strands. The authors produced the RNA interference (RNAi) spherulites using a rolling circle approach to transcribe the RNA. Rolling circle replication is utilized by certain viruses and cells to amplify genetic materials or generate replication intermediates. Recently, it has been exploited for use in genomic DNA amplification using the powerful phi29 DNA polymerase, which displays high processivity and high proofreading activity.[7] This efficient method of viral RNA synthesis has also been applied to the production of siRNA and small hairpin RNA.[8] Hammond and coworkers constructed a circular DNA construct harboring an siRNA gene preceded by a T7 promoter and lacking terminators. As a result, T7 RNA polymerase can act progressively and continuously around the circular DNA hundreds or thousands of times generating multiple copies of tandem RNA units (). As the RNA strand is transcribed continuously, it grows in length to become fiber-like, then sheet-like, and finally condenses into dense spherulitic RNA nanoparticles (). Based on the microscopic texture of these microspheres, the authors refer to these structures as RNAi microsponges. Lamellae, typically having widths of ~10 nm, pack densely to form spherulites with diameters varying from micrometers to hundreds of micrometers. The resultant semicrystalline structures exhibit characteristic birefringence patterns arising from the regular pattern of lamellae, a property also observed here as the hairpin moieties of RNA polymers organize and pack into microspheres with an average size of ~2 µm. Interestingly, this unique structure appears to protect RNA from degradation in the serum. In the report, the RNAi-spherulites were shown to produce ~21 nt small RNA fragments after incubation with Dicer. However, pure RNA is negatively charged and direct cellular uptake remains insignificant due to electrostatic repulsion from the negatively charged cell membrane. In order to achieve efficient cellular uptake and subsequent processing by the RNAi machinery the group introduced synthetic polycations, such as polyethylenimine (PEI), into the RNAi-spherulites to serve two purposes: (i) condense the RNAi-spherulite to a nanoscale particle, from 2 μm to 200 nm; and (ii) alter the net charge of the particle from negative to positive. PEI is a polymeric transfection agent. It is possible that PEI condenses RNAi-spherulites into nanoparticles with a positively charged outer layer, which can then bind to the anionic cell surface and subsequently be internalized into the cell. Due to the lower pH environment within the endosome, protonation of amine residues of PEI can lower the osmotic potential and cause osmotic swelling, which can result in bursting of the endosome and release of the payload to ultimately generate functional siRNAs derived from the RNAi-spherulites. Upon release into the cytoplasm, the RNA-induced silencing complex can then process the siRNA, which can successfully knockdown expression of target genes, as shown in previous in vitro and in vivo studies. Hammond and co-authors demonstrate that fluorescent PEI-condensed RNAi-spherulites can transfect a cancer cell line and silence firefly luciferase expression. In addition, they evaluated gene expression knockdown in vivo with intratumoral injection of the same PEI-condensed RNAi-spherulites designed to produce siRNA for the silencing of firefly luciferase expressed by the cancer cells. After 4 days, firefly luciferase expression was significantly reduced in induced tumors in mice by the RNAi-spherulites. The feasibility of in vivo delivery of PEI-condensed RNAi-spherulites for therapy, however, remains uncertain. Variable mechanisms and routes can lead to nanoparticle uptake by cells. Phagocytosis, macropinocytosis, and clathrin- or caveolae-mediated endocytosis all can lead to the internalization of nanoparticles. Extensive studies in xenograft models have revealed that delivery of polymer complexes or nanomaterials to the tumor require a delicate balance between minimizing particle clearance mediated by the monocyte phagocytic system, which includes lung, spleen, and liver macrophages (Kupffer cells), and extravasation from the porous tumor vasculature. Whether the PEI/RNAi-spherulite can be formulated in a way to evade the monocyte phagocytic system and accumulate in target organs remains to be evaluated. The targeted delivery into specific cells is the major point of interest that underlies the effective therapeutic use of any RNA nanoparticle. The internalization of RNAi-spherulites in this report does not involve specific targeting. Internalization of particles smaller than 200 nm in diameter involves clathrin-coated pits whereas entry of particles larger than 200 nm is mediated by caveolae. The 200 nm size reported here is large enough that nonspecific cell entry may still be an issue. It would be very interesting to elucidate which route is involved in the uptake of these large and unique nanoparticles. Moreover, the demonstration that intratumoral injection of RNAi-spherulites inhibits the expression of a target gene within tumors raises the prospect for the multifaceted utility of these particles if they could be modified to achieve specific targeting in vivo. However, for specific receptor-mediated endocytosis, it is generally believed that the optimal size for therapeutic nanoparticles is in the tens of nanometers; if this innovative design could be reproduced on a smaller scale of particle size, it has the potential to serve as the basis of a highly specific and efficacious cancer therapeutic. The spherulite self-assembly process is well characterized in synthetic polymers, such as polyethylene, upon slow cooling from the molten state.[9] Nevertheless, this phenomenon is not restricted to chemical polymers but is ubiquitous in nature, having been observed in crystallization processes involving matter as diverse as metals, mineral aggregates, liquid crystals, and biopolymers such as carbohydrates or proteins, and even DNA.[10] However, Hammond and coworkers are the first to report such behavior in RNA polymers. The elucidation of these polymeric properties of RNA provides new insight for future studies of RNA structures and should inspire others to consider these properties in the context of the design, assembly, function, chemical modification, drug conjugation, and therapeutic delivery of RNA structures. The emerging field of RNA nanotechnology[2] has brought about many innovations on the scientific front and holds strong promise for targeted therapies with significantly reduced side effects. RNA has proven versatile and multifaceted; it displays many unexpected functions and features,[11,12,13,14,15] and it is anticipated that fervent research efforts will continue toward application development of this promising technology. The report by Hammond and coworkers reveals additional features in RNA nanoparticle assembly, provides new insight into siRNA delivery, and opens new directions of research in RNA nanotechnology, while its therapeutic potential requires further evaluation.
  14 in total

1.  A passion for research.

Authors:  Margarita Salas
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2009-10-22       Impact factor: 9.261

2.  Organization of intracellular reactions with rationally designed RNA assemblies.

Authors:  Camille J Delebecque; Ariel B Lindner; Pamela A Silver; Faisal A Aldaye
Journal:  Science       Date:  2011-06-23       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Self-assembling RNA square.

Authors:  Sergey M Dibrov; Jaime McLean; Jerod Parsons; Thomas Hermann
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-04-04       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Self-assembled RNA interference microsponges for efficient siRNA delivery.

Authors:  Jong Bum Lee; Jinkee Hong; Daniel K Bonner; Zhiyong Poon; Paula T Hammond
Journal:  Nat Mater       Date:  2012-02-26       Impact factor: 43.841

5.  Fabrication of stable and RNase-resistant RNA nanoparticles active in gearing the nanomotors for viral DNA packaging.

Authors:  Jing Liu; Songchuan Guo; Mathieu Cinier; Luda S Shlyakhtenko; Yi Shu; Chaoping Chen; Guanxin Shen; Peixuan Guo
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2010-12-14       Impact factor: 15.881

6.  Pharmacological characterization of chemically synthesized monomeric phi29 pRNA nanoparticles for systemic delivery.

Authors:  Sherine Abdelmawla; Songchuan Guo; Limin Zhang; Sai M Pulukuri; Prithviraj Patankar; Patrick Conley; Joseph Trebley; Peixuan Guo; Qi-Xiang Li
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2011-04-05       Impact factor: 11.454

Review 7.  The emerging field of RNA nanotechnology.

Authors:  Peixuan Guo
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2010-11-21       Impact factor: 39.213

8.  RNA interference from multimeric shRNAs generated by rolling circle transcription.

Authors:  Attila A Seyhan; Alexander V Vlassov; Brian H Johnston
Journal:  Oligonucleotides       Date:  2006

9.  Synthetic RNA-protein complex shaped like an equilateral triangle.

Authors:  Hirohisa Ohno; Tetsuhiro Kobayashi; Rinko Kabata; Kei Endo; Takuma Iwasa; Shige H Yoshimura; Kunio Takeyasu; Tan Inoue; Hirohide Saito
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2011-01-16       Impact factor: 39.213

10.  In vitro assembly of cubic RNA-based scaffolds designed in silico.

Authors:  Kirill A Afonin; Eckart Bindewald; Alan J Yaghoubian; Neil Voss; Erica Jacovetty; Bruce A Shapiro; Luc Jaeger
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2010-08-29       Impact factor: 39.213

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Authors:  Emil F Khisamutdinov; Hui Li; Daniel L Jasinski; Jiao Chen; Jian Fu; Peixuan Guo
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