| Literature DB >> 27355138 |
Min-Zhi Yu1, Wen-Hao Pang1, Ting Yang1, Jian-Cheng Wang2, Lin Wei1, Chong Qiu1, Yi-Fan Wu1, Wei-Zhong Liu1, Wei Wei1, Xi-Ying Guo1, Qiang Zhang1.
Abstract
Systemic delivery of siRNA is the most challenging step to transfer RNAi to clinical application for breast cancer therapy. In this study, the tumor targeted, T7 peptide modified core-shell nanoparticles (named as T7-LPC/siRNA NPs) were constructed to achieve effective systemic delivery of siRNA. The core-shell structure of T7-LPC/siRNA NPs enables them to encapsulate siRNA in the core and protect it from RNase degradation during circulation. In vitro cellular uptake and gene silencing experiments demonstrated that T7-LPC/siEGFR NPs could deliver EGFR siRNA into breast cancer cells through receptor mediated endocytosis and effectively down-regulate the EGFR expression. In vivo distribution study proved the T7-LPC/siRNA NPs could deliver fluorescence labeled siRNA to the tumor site more efficiently than the non-targeted PEG-LPC/siRNA NPs after intravenous administration. Furthermore, the experiments of in vivo tumor therapy confirmed that intravenous administration of T7-LPC/siEGFR NPs led to an effective EGFR down-regulation and an obvious inhibition of breast tumor growth, with little activation of immune responses and negligible body weight loss. These results suggested that T7-LPC/siRNA NPs could be an effective and safe systemic siRNA delivery system for RNAi-based breast cancer therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Core-shell nanoparticles; Small interfering RNA; Systemic delivery; T7 peptide; Tumor targeted delivery
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27355138 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejps.2016.06.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pharm Sci ISSN: 0928-0987 Impact factor: 4.384