| Literature DB >> 27621434 |
Yunfeng Yan1, Li Liu2, Hu Xiong1, Jason B Miller1, Kejin Zhou1, Petra Kos1, Kenneth E Huffman3, Sussana Elkassih1, John W Norman1, Ryan Carstens3, James Kim4, John D Minna3, Daniel J Siegwart5.
Abstract
Conventional chemotherapeutics nonselectively kill all rapidly dividing cells, which produces numerous side effects. To address this challenge, we report the discovery of functional polyesters that are capable of delivering siRNA drugs selectively to lung cancer cells and not to normal lung cells. Selective polyplex nanoparticles (NPs) were identified by high-throughput library screening on a unique pair of matched cancer/normal cell lines obtained from a single patient. Selective NPs promoted rapid endocytosis into HCC4017 cancer cells, but were arrested at the membrane of HBEC30-KT normal cells during the initial transfection period. When injected into tumor xenografts in mice, cancer-selective NPs were retained in tumors for over 1 wk, whereas nonselective NPs were cleared within hours. This translated to improved siRNA-mediated cancer cell apoptosis and significant suppression of tumor growth. Selective NPs were also able to mediate gene silencing in xenograft and orthotopic tumors via i.v. injection or aerosol inhalation, respectively. Importantly, this work highlights that different cells respond differentially to the same drug carrier, an important factor that should be considered in the design and evaluation of all NP carriers. Because no targeting ligands are required, these functional polyester NPs provide an exciting alternative approach for selective drug delivery to tumor cells that may improve efficacy and reduce adverse side effects of cancer therapies.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; drug delivery; functional polyesters; nanoparticles; siRNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27621434 PMCID: PMC5047169 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1606886113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205