| Literature DB >> 29416827 |
Rusdina Bte Ladju1,2, Devis Pascut1, Muhammad Nasrum Massi2, Claudio Tiribelli1, Caecilia H C Sukowati1.
Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common cancers with a high mortality rate. Late diagnosis and poor prognosis are still a major drawback since curative therapies such as liver resection and liver transplantation are effective only for an early stage HCC. Development of novel molecular targeting therapies against HCC may provide new options that will improve the efficiency of the diagnosis and the success of the therapy, thus ameliorating the life expectancy of the patients. The aptamer is an oligonucleotide nanomedicine that has high binding affinity and specificity to small and large target molecules in the intracellular and extracellular environment with agonist or antagonist function. Currently, several aptamers for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes are under development to recognize different molecules of HCC. In in vitro models, the aptamer has been shown to be able to reduce the growth of HCC cells and increase the sensitivity to conventional chemotherapies. In in vivo mouse models, aptamer could induce cell apoptosis with antitumor activity. Overall data had shown that aptamer has limited toxicity and might be safe in clinical application. This review summarizes recent information of aptamer as a potential oligonucleotide nanomedicine tool, in diagnostics, targeted therapy, and as drug delivery nano-vehicles.Entities:
Keywords: aptamer; future therapy; hepatocellular carcinoma; oligonucleotide nanomedicine
Year: 2017 PMID: 29416827 PMCID: PMC5788695 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.23359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Aptamer applications in cancer medicine
Oligonucleotide aptamer can function as both extra- and intra-cellular targeting molecule, and as antagonist and agonist activating molecule. By using conjugation with imaging probe, drug, or gene-therapy, aptamer can be used as a nano-delivery agent in a direct or indirect system.
Modified SELEX methods
| SELEX methods | Principle | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| Localizing target molecules inside a living cell | [ | |
| Cell-based | Targeting the whole live cell | [ |
| One-round step | One selection rounds of aptamer generation | [ |
| Computational docking technology | [ | |
| Capillary electrophoresis | Electrophoretic mobility based separation | [ |
| Magnetic bead-based | Magnetic beads immobilization | [ |
| High-throughput sequencing-based | High-throughput sequencing and bioinformatics analysis | [ |
| Ligand-guided selection | Using specific antibody to compete with the target molecule | [ |
| Isogenic cell | Isogenic cell line application in counter selection step | [ |
| Quantitative parallel aptamer selection system | Combination of microfluidic, next generation sequencing, and | [ |
Aptamers development against HCC
| Aptamer (Oligotype) | Target | Principle | Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LNC2_apta2&4, (DNA) | Lipocalin-2 | Sandwich-based assay | Detection | [ |
| Aptamer C-2 (DNA) | HepG2 | Cell-SELEX | Detection | [ |
| TLS11a (DNA) | HepG2 | Cell-SELEX | Detection | [ |
| TLS11a (DNA) | HepG2 | Dual recognition and signal amplification | Cytosensor | [ |
| TLS11a (DNA) | HepG2 | Voltammetric based | Cytosensor | [ |
| LY-1 (DNA) | HCCLM9 | Quantum dots and magnetic particles | Prognostic probe | [ |
| SLeX-AP (DNA) | Circulating tumor cells | Biocompatible transparent nanostructured substrates | Controlling personalized treatment | [ |
| TLS11a (DNA) | HepG2 | ‘Activatable’ aptamer-based fluorescence probe | Detection and imaging | [ |
| Bio-TLS11a (DNA) | HepG2 | Streptavidin-fluorescent silica nanoparticles combination | Detection and imaging | [ |
| TLS11a (DNA) | HepG2 | Aptamer- based electrochemical biosensors | Detection and imaging | [ |
| TLS11a (DNA) | HepG2 | Label-free microcantilever array | Detection | [ |
| AS1411 (DNA) | Nucleolin | AS1411-Dox adduct | Drug delivery | [ |
| TLS11a-GC (DNA) | LH86 | SELEX | Drug delivery | [ |
| TLS11a (DNA) | MEAR | Aptamer-biodegradable polymer | Drug delivery | [ |
| EPAP (RNA) | EpCAM | Aptamer-gene therapy | Therapy | [ |
| OPN-R3 (RNA) | Osteopontin | SELEX | Therapy | [ |
| GT75 (DNA) | Elongation factor 1A | Liposome-aptamer | Drug delivery | [ |
| AFP (RNA) | Alpha-fetoprotein | SELEX | Detection and therapy | [ |
| Ep-MNPs (DNA) | EpCAM | Magnetic nanoparticle-aptamer | Imaging and therapy | [ |
| AP273 | Alpha-fetoprotein | CE-SELEX | Imaging and therapy | [ |
Figure 2Aptamer for HCC diagnostic and targeted therapy
Aptamer can act both as a diagnostic tool in the conjugation with imaging probe and biosensor and a targeted therapy agent by its neutralizing effect and by its combination with antineoplastic drugs and/or gene therapy.