| Literature DB >> 26642236 |
Xinli Liu1,2.
Abstract
Small interfering RNAs (siRNA) have enormous potential as therapeutics to target and treat various bone disorders such as osteoporosis and cancer bone metastases. However, effective and specific delivery of siRNA therapeutics to bone and bone-specific cells in vivo is very challenging. To realize the full therapeutic potential of siRNA in treating bone disorders, a safe and efficient, tissue- and cell-specific delivery system must be developed. This review focuses on recent advances in bone site-specific delivery of siRNA at the tissue or cellular level. Bone-targeted nanoparticulate siRNA carriers and various bone-targeted moieties such as bisphosphonates, oligopeptides (Asp)8 and (AspSerSer)6, and aptamers are highlighted. Incorporation of these bone-seeking targeting moieties into siRNA carriers allows for recognition of different sub-tissue functional domains of bone and also specific cell types residing in bone tissue. It also provides a means for bone-formation surface-, bone-resorption surface-, or osteoblast-specific targeting and transportation of siRNA therapeutics. The discussion mainly focuses on systemic and local bone-specific delivery of siRNA in osteoporosis and bone metastasis preclinical models.Entities:
Keywords: bone-seeking nanoparticles; bone-specific delivery; bone-targeting moiety; cancer bone metastasis; osteoporosis; siRNA delivery
Year: 2015 PMID: 26642236 PMCID: PMC4946317 DOI: 10.7555/JBR.30.20150110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Res ISSN: 1674-8301
Fig. 1The RNAi pathway for post-transcriptional gene silencing.
When long double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) is introduced into the cytoplasm of a cell, the dsRNA is cleaved by the enzyme Dicer into siRNA (21-22 nucleotides long with 2-nucleotides overhangs on the 3′ ends). Alternatively, chemically synthesized siRNA can be transfected into cells to mimic that of Dicer products. The siRNA is then incorporated into the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), which can distinguish between the different strands of the siRNA. The RISC unwinds the siRNA duplex, the passenger strand (blue) is degraded, and the guide strand (red) is retained within the RISC. The activated RISC-guided strand complex binds to mRNA (black) through complementary base pairing, ultimately degrades the mRNA, and results in silencing of the target gene.
Bone-seeking targeting moieties
| Bone-targeting moiety | Targeting sites and Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|
| Bisphosphonates | Bind to both the bone-formation and bone-resorption surfaces. Strong affinity to hydroxyapatite via calcium ion-mediated coordination bonding. | [ |
| (Asp)8 or (Asp)6 oligopeptide | Preferentially binds to highly crystalized hydroxyapatite on the bone-resorption surface. | [ |
| (AspSerSer)6 oligopeptide | High affinity for lowly crystalized hydroxyapatite and calcium phosphate on the bone-formation surface. | [ |
| CH6 aptamer | Binds specifically to osteoblasts at the cellular level. | [ |