| Literature DB >> 27789943 |
Jian Guo1, Xiaojing Jiang1, Shuangying Gui2.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which includes pan> class="Disease">ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, is a chronic, recrudescent disease that invades the gastrointestinal tract, and it requires surgery or lifelong medicinal therapy. The conventional medicinal therapies for IBD, such as anti-inflammatories, glucocorticoids, and immunosuppressants, are limited because of their systemic adverse effects and toxicity during long-term treatment. RNA interference (RNAi) precisely regulates susceptibility genes to decrease the expression of proinflammatory cytokines related to IBD, which effectively alleviates IBD progression and promotes intestinal mucosa recovery. RNAi molecules generally include short interfering RNA (siRNA) and microRNA (miRNA). However, naked RNA tends to degrade in vivo as a consequence of endogenous ribonucleases and pH variations. Furthermore, RNAi treatment may cause unintended off-target effects and immunostimulation. Therefore, nanovectors of siRNA and miRNA were introduced to circumvent these obstacles. Herein, we introduce non-viral nanosystems of RNAi molecules and discuss these systems in detail. Additionally, the delivery barriers and challenges associated with RNAi molecules will be discussed from the perspectives of developing efficient delivery systems and potential clinical use.Entities:
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.