| Literature DB >> 27789943 |
Jian Guo1, Xiaojing Jiang1, Shuangying Gui2.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which includesEntities:
Keywords: RNA interference; inflammatory bowel disease; miRNA; nanoparticles; siRNA; target therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27789943 PMCID: PMC5068481 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S116902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Figure 1RNAi nanoparticles target to epithelial cells or macrophages in intestinal lumen.
Abbreviation: RNAi, RNA interference.
Summary of siRNA nanosystems in IBD treatment
| Delivery system | siRNA target | Formulation | Size and zeta potential | Targeting
| Route of administration | Characteristics | Ref | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moiety | Cell and ligand | Mechanism | |||||||
| Neutral liposome–hyaluronan–integrin mAb | Cyclin D1 | siRNA-protamine encapsulated into β7 I-tsNPs by rehydrating and lyophilized | 877±110 nm | FIB504 mAb | β7 integrin on leukocyte | Antibody-targeting integrin | Intravenous injection via tail veins | Protamine is a positively charged protein, which was used to enhance delivery of nucleic acids. Hyaluronan maintains the structural integrity in the cycle of lyophilization and rehydration. | |
| Modified chitosan–UAC–PEG–scCD98 | CD98 | Complex coacervation technique | 147–261 nm | Single-chain CD98 Ab | CD98 protein on colonic epithelial cells and macrophages | Antibody-targeting delivery | Oral gavage NPs encapsulated into hydrogel of alginate and chitosan | PEI in NPs functions as “proton sponge” to escape degradation by lysosome. | |
| Galactosylated trimethyl chitosan–cysteine | Map4k4 | Ionic gelation with TPP and siRNA entrapment method | 140–160 nm | Galactosyl | MGL on macrophage | MGL-mediated targeting | Oral gavage administration | Trimethyl chitosan improves solubility and gene transfection efficiency in physiological conditions. Cysteine–chitosan enhances bioadhesion capacity via covalently bonding with mucin glycoproteins. Cationic delivery systems spontaneously conjugate with anionic cross-linker TPP without sonication protecting siRNA. | |
| Mannose trimethyl chitosan–cysteine | TNF-α | Ionic gelation with TPP and siRNA entrapment method | 100–150 nm | Mannose | MR on enterocytes and M-cells | MR-mediated targeting | – | Mannose moieties improve intestinal permeation of Peyer’s patches. | |
| SC12-cyclodextrin- | TNF-α | Complex coacervation technique | Without L-PEI: 240 nm | – | – | Mucoadhesion | Intrarectal administration | NPs keep stability in simulated colonic fluids and α-amylase. B-PEI has more appropriate electrostatic attraction with siRNA than L-PEI at low N/P ratio. | |
| β-1,3- | Map4k4 | SiRNA absorbs into glucan shell with electrostatic attraction and coated with PEI | 2–4 µm | – | Phagocytosis via dectin-1 receptor on M-cells and macrophages | Mucoadhesion | Oral gavage administration | First report of oral siRNA delivery. The silencing efficiency of NPs up to 250 times compared to previous studies of systemic siRNA delivery in vivo. | |
| PLA | TNF-α | Double emulsion/solvent evaporation | 380 nm | – | – | Mucoadhesion | Oral gavage administration | Encapsulate NPs into hydrogen of alginate and chitosan at a weight ratio of 7/3 and administered orally to mice. | |
| PLA | Klf4 | Double emulsion/solvent evaporation | – | – | – | Mucoadhesion | Oral gavage administration | DSS increases epithelial permeation efficiency of NPs. NPs uptake more by proliferating cells. | |
| PLA–PEG–maleimide–Ab | TNF-α | Double emulsion/solvent evaporation | Without Fab’: 609±37 nm | F4/80 Ab | F4/80 antigens on macrophages | Antibody-targeting delivery | Oral gavage administration | SiRNA-PEI complex decreases the therapeutic dose of siRNA. | 66 |
| CaP/PLGA/PEI | TNF-α IP-10 KC | Rapid precipitation and double emulsion/solvent evaporation | 151.52 nm | – | – | Mucoadhesion | Intrarectal administration | B-PEI absorbed on the surface of CaP/PLGA nanoparticles to enhance cell endocytosis and endosomal escape. Intestinal epithelial cells as target of CaP/PLGA nanoparticles. | |
| NiMOS | TNF-α | Double emulsion-like technique | NPs: 279±3.2 nm | – | – | Mucoadhesion | Oral gavage administration | Blank NiMOS and scramble siRNA NiMOS show off-target effects. | |
| NiMOS | TNF-α/cyclin D1 | Double emulsion-like technique | – | – | – | Mucoadhesion | Oral gavage administration | Combined siRNA treatment caused stronger downregulated efficiency than single siRNA. | |
| PPADT | TNF-α | siRNA-DOTAP/PPADT mixture by emulsification method | 600 nm | – | – | Mucoadhesion | Oral gavage administration | DOTAP enhances siRNA transfection and endosome escapes. Oral TKNs target to disease tissue and perform silencing efficiency in tenfold lower dose than GeRPs. | |
| p(CBA–B-PEI)–PEG–Man | TNF-α | Complex coacervation technique | Without TPP: 302–363 nm | Mannose | MR on macrophages | MR-mediated targeting | Ex vivo cell culture | TPP is non-toxic, enhances siRNA consideration with polycation and decreases the size of NPs. | |
Note: “–” Indicates data not available.
Abbreviations: Ab, antibody; B-PEI, branched-polyethylenimine; CaP, calcium phosphate; CBA, N,N′-bioreducible cystamine bisacrylamide; DOTAP, 1,2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium-propane; GeRPs, β-1,3-d-glucan-encapsulated siRNA particles; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; Klf4, Krüppel-like factor 4; L-PEI, liner-polyethylenimine; mAb, monoclonal antibody; Man, mannose; MGL, macrophage galactose-type lectin; MPs, microspheres; MR, mannose receptor; NiMOS, nanoparticles-in-microsphere oral system; NPs, nanoparticles; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PEI, polyethylenimine; PLA, polylactide; PLGA, poly(d,l-lactide-co-glycolide acid); Ref, reference; ScCD98, single-chain CD98; siRNA, short interfering RNA; TKNs, thioketal nanoparticles; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-alpha; TPP, tripolyphosphate; UAC, urocanic acid; β7 I-tsNPs, β7 antibody-equipped liposome-siRNA complexes.
Silencing experiments of different siRNA nanosystems in vitro and vivo
| Delivery system | In vitro cell model | In vitro gene silencing result | Animal model | In vivo dose and administration interval | In vivo gene silencing result | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neutral liposome–hyaluronan–integrin mAb | TK-1 cells | Suppression of CyD1, proinflammatory TH1 cytokine of IFN-γ, IL-2, IL-12, TNF-α. | C57BL/6 mice with DSS-induced | CyD1-siRNA 2.5 mg/kg entrapped in β7 I-tsNPs at days 0, 2, 4, and 6 | Reduction in mRNA expression of CyD1 and IL-12, TNF-α. Drastic suppression of intestinal damage, leukocyte infiltration, reversal body weight loss. | |
| Modified chitosan–UAC–PEG–scCD98 | RAW 264.7 cells and colon-26 cells with LPS-induced | CD98 expression decreases to 27% of the control level. | Chronic colitis: transfer wild-type CD4+CD45RBhigh T-cells into RAG1−/− mice. | Chronic colitis: 1 mg/kg of CD98 siRNA-loaded NPs double gavage twice a week for 5 consecutive weeks. Acute colitis: 2 mg/kg of CD98 siRNA-loaded NPs double gavage twice daily for 4 consecutive days | Chronic colitis: mRNA expression of CD98, TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-12 was decreased to 65.0%, 59.9%, 80.4%, and 31.8%, respectively, compared with control. Significant reduction of weight loss and MPO (~65.7%). Acute colitis: mRNA expression of CD98, TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-12 was decreased to 47.7%, 26.0%, 81.2%, and 71.2%, respectively. Body weight and MPO activity were correspondingly decreased. | |
| Galactosylated trimethyl chitosan–cysteine | RAW 264.7 cells with LPS-induced | Expressions of Map4k4 and TNF-α mRNA were sharply decreased by 79.9% and 78.9%. | Male C57BL/6 mice with DSS-induced | SiRNA dose of 250 mg/kg per day for 6 consecutive days | Expressions of Map4k4 and TNF-α mRNA were sharply decreased by 92.1% and 69.0%. Inhibition of MPO activity, body weight loss, and colon shortening. | |
| SC12-cyclodextrin- | RAW 264.7 cells with LPS-induced | TNF-α and IL-6 mRNA drop ~21- and sevenfold compared to control. | Female C57BL/6JOlaHsD mice | The volume of 100 µL solution administered to mice on day 2 and day 4 post-DSS treatment | Proximal colon tissue shows more significant TNF-α and IL-6 silencing than distal colon. Drastic reduction of TNF-α and IL-6 mRNA expression by 73%±13% and 58%±19%. | |
| β-1,3- | Peritoneal exudate cells with LPS-induced isolated from C57BL6/J male mice | TNF mRNA and TNF-α protein were inhibited by 50% and 30%. | C57BL6/J mice | 20 mg siRNA/kg | NPs increase survival rates of model mice. Reduction of TNF-α and IL-1β accompanied with TNF-α silencing. | |
| PLA | RAW 264.7 cells with LPS-induced | Significant reduction of TNF-α (175.9 vs 559.8 pg/mL). | C57BL/6 mice | The dose of 5 mg NPs/mL hydrogel pre-treated for 4 days before LPS treatment | Significantly TNF-α reduction in colonic tissue and blood. (Colon tissue 7.5 vs 136.2 pg/mL blood: 1,751.5 vs 2,084.5 pg/mL) | |
| PLA | Embryonic fibroblasts in mice | Efficient suppression of Klf4 protein. | C57BL/6 mice | The dose of 0.5 ng siRNA in 1 mg NPs and 100 mL hydrogel per mice daily for 7 consecutive days | Reduction of clinical score and MPO activity in mice with colitis. | |
| PLA–PEG–maleimide–Ab | RAW 264.7 cells with LPS-induced | Significant reduction of TNF-α and enhanced kinetics of uptake. | C57BL/6 mice | Daily gavages of hydrogel-encapsulated NPs (10 mg/mL) during the 7/8 days with DSS treatment | 60 µg/kg TNF-α siRNA silence, 60% TNF-α expression, and 30% NPs were uptaken in intestinal macrophages in vivo. Higher IKβα accumulation in the treatment group than control. | |
| CaP/PLGA/PEI | MODE-K | The expression of IP-10 gene was reduced 30% as well as the expression of TNF-α or KC gene was reduced 50%. | BALB/c mice | CaP/PLGA nanoparticles (12 µg) were administered intrarectally from days 2 to 5 after DSS treatment | The expression of TNF-α mRNA decreased 40% and the expression of KC and IP-10 decreased 50% in the colon tissue. | |
| NiMOS | – | – | Female Balb/c mice | The dose of 1.2 mg/kg body weight in 200 µL final volume | Reduction of TNF-α, IL-1β, IFN-γ, and MCP-1. Increasing body weight and falling levels of MPO. | |
| NiMOS | – | – | Female Balb/c mice | The dose of 1.2 mg/kg body weight | Reduction of TNF-α, IL-1, IFN-γ. Increasing body weight and falling levels of MPO. | |
| PPADT | RAW 264.7 cells with LPS-induced | Significant reduction of TNF-α production. | C57BL/6 mice | The dose of 2.3 or 0.23 mg siRNA/kg per day for 6 consecutive days | Reduction of mRNA expression of TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1, and IFN-γ. | |
| p(CBA–B-PEI)–PEG–Man | RAW 264.7 cells with LPS-induced | Reduction of TNF-α production and the effects depend on the weight ratio of TPP-PPM/siRNA | Colitis tissues from FVB male mice with DSS induced | NPs added to the wells contain culture medium and colonic tissues, final TNF-α siRNA concentration in the medium is set as 100, 200, and 300 nM | TNF-α expression was decreased 61.0%. NPs were taken up by 29.5% colon macrophages. | |
Note: “–” Indicates data not available.
Abbreviations: Ab, antibody; B-PEI, branched-polyethylenimine; CaP, calcium phosphate; CyD1, cyclin D1; DSS, dextran sulfate sodium; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; Klf4, Krüppel-like factor 4; LPS, lipopolysaccharides; mAb, monoclonal antibody; Map4k4, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase kinase 4; Man, mannose; MCP, monocyte chemotactic protein; MPO, myeloperoxidase; NiMOS, nanoparticles-in-microsphere oral system; NPs, nanoparticles; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PLA, polylactide; PLGA, poly(d,l-lactide-co-glycolide acid); ScCD98, single-chain CD98; siRNA, short interfering RNA; TH, T-helper cell; UAC, urocanic acid.
Figure 2Chitosan-based nanoparticle delivery systems for siRNA delivery in IBD treatment.
Notes: Chemical structures of chitosan (A) and chitosan-based delivery systems (B–D).
Abbreviations: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; PEG, polyethylene glycol; ScCD98, single-chain CD98; siRNA, short interfering RNA; UAC, urocanic acid.
Figure 3Other polysaccharides for siRNA delivery in IBD treatment.
Notes: Chemical structures of modified amphiphilic cyclodextrin (A), β-1,3-d-glucan (B), and konjac glucomannan (C).
Abbreviations: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; siRNA, short interfering RNA.
Figure 4PLA-based nanoparticle delivery systems for siRNA delivery in IBD treatment.
Notes: Chemical structures of PLA, PVA, and PLA–PEG–maleimide–Ab.
Abbreviations: Ab, antibody; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PLA, polylactide; PVA, polyvinyl alcohol; siRNA, short interfering RNA.
Figure 5Schematic illustration of CaP/PLGA-based nanoparticles.
Abbreviations: CaP, calcium phosphate; PEI, polyethylenimine; PLGA, poly(d,l-lactide-co-glycolide acid); siRNA, short interfering RNA.
Figure 6Schematic illustration of nanoparticles in the microsphere system.
Abbreviations: PCL, poly-ε-caprolactone; siRNA, short interfering RNA.
Figure 7Thioketal and PEI-based nanoparticulate delivery system for siRNA delivery in IBD treatment.
Notes: Chemical structures of PPADT, B-PEI, CBA, and p(CBA–B-PEI)–PEG–Man.
Abbreviations: B-PEI, branched-polyethylenimine; CBA, cystamine bisacrylamide; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; Man, mannose; PEG, polyethylene glycol; siRNA, short interfering RNA.
Figure 8Colon histological sections stained with H&E from mice receiving different kinds of nanoparticles.
Notes: Colon histological sections stained with H&E from mice receiving normal water and gavage of phosphate buffer saline (A). Colon histological sections stained with H&E from DSS-induced mice receiving daily gavage of phosphate buffer saline (B), scramble-siRNA-loaded TKNs (C), TNF-α-siRNA-loaded TKNs (D), TNF-α-siRNA-loaded PLGA nanoparticles (E), or TNF-α-siRNA-loaded β-glucan particles (F). Adapted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: [Nat Mater],84 copyright (2010). The β-glucan particles (F) have demonstrated siRNA carrying ability by oral administration in inflammatory treatment at previous studies.59
Abbreviations: DSS, dextran sulfate sodium; H&E, hematoxylin/eosin; siRNA, short interfering RNA; TKNs, thioketal nanoparticles; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.
Challenges of RNAi molecular delivery in IBD
| RNAi molecule | Physical barriers | Pathological changes in gastrointestinal tract of IBD |
|---|---|---|
| High molecular mass: ~13 kDa of siRNA | Low pH stomach environment | Abnormal colon luminal pH: 2.3–5.5 |
Abbreviations: IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; RNAi, RNA interference; siRNA, short interfering RNA.