| Literature DB >> 25637948 |
Cheng Yang1,2, Chao Zhang3,4, Zitong Zhao5,6, Tongyu Zhu7,8, Bin Yang9,10,11.
Abstract
The significant improvements in siRNA therapy have been achieved, which have great potential applications in humans. The kidney is a comparatively easy target organ of siRNA therapy due to its unique structural and functional characteristics. Here, we reviewed recent achievements in siRNA design, delivery and application with focuses on kidney diseases, in particular kidney transplant-related injuries. In addition, the strategy for increasing serum stability and immune tolerance of siRNA was also discussed. At last, the future challenges of siRNA therapy including organ/tissue/cell-specific delivery and time-controlled silence, as well as selecting therapeutic targets, were addressed as well.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25637948 PMCID: PMC4354745 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-015-0387-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1Schematic drawing showed a series of studies using caspase-3 siRNA. The caspase-3 siRNA was first used to protect porcine renal tubular epithelia cells against hydrogen peroxide-induced injury. The renoprotection of naked caspase-3 siRNA with the same sequences was further validated in a porcine ex vivo isolated reperfusion model, then shown that the siRNA was effective for cold preservation, but not in auto-transplanted kidneys without systematic siRNA treatment. Finally, the modified siRNA of caspase-3 via locked nucleic acid stabilized the siRNA in serum, and significantly protected auto-transplanted kidneys.
Studies on kidney diseases using siRNAs
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| Yang et al. | Porcine LLC-PK1 | - | Cationic lipid | In vitro | Caspase-3 | Apoptosis | [ |
| Yang et al. | Porcine | - | UW solution | Ex vivo, renal artery injection and autologous blood perfusate | Caspase-3 | Apoptosis | [ |
| Yang et al. | Porcine | - | UW solution | In vivo, renal artery injection | Caspase-3 | Apoptosis | [ |
| Yang et al. | Porcine | LNA | UW solution | In vivo, renal artery injection and systemically iv. | Caspase-3 | Apoptosis | [ |
| Liu et al. | Mice | - | Plasmid | In vivo, hydrodynamic injection iv. | TLR9 | Innate immunity | [ |
| Hamar et al. | Mice | 2’-O-ACE-RNA phosphoramidites | Phosphate buffered saline | In vivo, hydrodynamic injection iv. | Fas | Apoptosis | [ |
| Wan et al. | Rats | - | Phosphate buffered saline | In vivo, renal artery injection | IKKβ | Inflammation | [ |
| Xia et al. | Mice | - | Cationized gelatin microspheres | In vivo, injected via ureter | HSP47 | collagen-producing, fibrosis | [ |
| Molitoris et al. | Rats | 2’O-methylation | Lipofectamine 2000 | In vivo, iv. | p53 | Apoptosis | [ |
| Zheng et al. | Mice | - | Lipofectamine 2000 | In vivo, hydrodynamic injection iv. | Complement 3 and caspases-3 | Complement and apoptosis | [ |
| Shimizu et al. | Mice | - | Nanocarrier complexation | In vivo, ip. | MAPK1 | Immunity | [ |
| Shang et al. | ACHN, A498 RCC cells | - | Lipofectamine 2000 | In vitro | HIF-1α, HIF-2α | Tumorigenesis | [ |
| Juengel et al. | Caki-1 RCC cells | - | Transfection reagent supplied by Qiagen | In vitro | HDAC1, HDAC2 | Acetylation | [ |
| Fujino et al. | Mice | - | Cationic lipid | In vivo, renal artery injection | p53 | Apoptosis | [ |
UW: University of Wisconsin; TLR: toll-like receptor; siSTABLE: stability-enhanced siRNA; RCC: renal cell carcinoma; MAPK1: mitogen-activated protein kinase 1; HIF: hypoxia induced factor; HDAC: histone deacetylases.
Clinical trials of siRNA therapy in kidney diseases
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| NCT00554359 | I5NP | Phase I, completed | Kidney injury; Acute renal failure |
| NCT00802347 | I5NP | Phase I/II, active, not recruiting | Delayed graft function in kidney transplantation |
| NCT00689065 | M2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase/CALAA-01 | Phase I, terminated | Solid tumor cancers |
| NCT02166255 | siRNA-transfected peripheral blood mononuclear cells APN401 | Phase I, not yet recruiting | Melanoma, kidney cancer, pancreatic cancer, or other solid tumors that are metastatic or cannot be removed by surgery |
Figure 2Study design of identifying and validating potential targets for siRNA treatment using human transplant kidney biopsies.