| Literature DB >> 34885247 |
Naoya Kuriyama1, Yusuke Yoshioka1, Shinsuke Kikuchi2, Akihiko Okamura1, Nobuyoshi Azuma2, Takahiro Ochiya1.
Abstract
Nucleic acid drugs, such as siRNAs, antisense oligonucleotides, and miRNAs, exert their therapeutic effects by causing genetic changes in cells. However, there are various limitations in their delivery to target organs and cells, making their application to cancer treatment difficult. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are lipid bilayer particles that are released from most cells, are stable in the blood, and have low immunogenicity. Methods using EVs to deliver nucleic acid drugs to target organs are rapidly being developed that take advantage of these properties. There are two main methods for loading nucleic acid drugs into EVs. One is to genetically engineer the parent cell and load the target gene into the EV, and the other is to isolate EVs and then load them with the nucleic acid drug. Target organ delivery methods include passive targeting using the enhanced permeation and retention effect of EVs and active targeting in which EVs are modified with antibodies, peptides, or aptamers to enhance their accumulation in tumors. In this review, we summarize the advantages of EVs as a drug delivery system for nucleic acid drugs, the methods of loading nucleic acid drugs into EVs, and the targeting of EVs to target organs.Entities:
Keywords: aptamer; drug delivery system; exosome; extracellular vesicles; nucleic acid drug
Year: 2021 PMID: 34885247 PMCID: PMC8656933 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13236137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Mechanism of gene regulation by oligonucleotide therapy. SiRNA is a double strand RNA of about 20 bp, and the passenger strand is degraded followed by the formation of RISC. SiRNA draws target mRNA into RISC and degrades the mRNA. ASO is a 15–25 nucleotide single strand RNA that acts alone on mRNA and degrades it. The miRNA is a double strand RNA of about 20 bp. The passenger strand is discarded followed by the formation of RISC. miRNAs bind to the 3′UTR of mRNAs to regulate translation and degrade mRNAs.
EV-related nucleic acid therapeutics.
| Types of | Cargo Mediators | Cancer Type | Parent Cell | Loading Method | Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| siRNA | siS100A4 | breast cancer | breast cancer cell | Coincubation and extrusion | Involved in various pathways | [ |
| si-c-Met | gastric cancer | HEK293T cell | Parental cells transfection using | Reverse chemoresistance to Cisplatin | [ | |
| siKRASG12S | lung cancer | Milk | Electroporation and Exo-fect | Antiproliferative effect via silencing KRASG12S | [ | |
| BCR-ABL siRNA | Chronic myeloid leukemia | HEK293T cell | Parental cells transfection using | Chronic myeloid leukemia cell growth in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| siSurvivin | Prostate cancer | HEK293T cell | Binding of Cholesterol to the arrowhead of pRNA-3WJ fused with siSurvivin | Inhibition cell apoptosis | [ | |
| ASO | G3139 (BCL-2 ASO) | Hepatocellular carcinoma | HepG2 cells | Cholesterol-conjugated ASO was loaded onto the EVs | Downregulation of anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 | [ |
| Antisense miRNA oligonucleotide against miR-21 | Glioblastoma | 293T cells | Electroporation | Reduction of tumor size via upregulation of | [ | |
| miRNA | miR-126 | non-small cell lung carcinoma | patient serum | Exo-fect | Inhibiting tumor proliferation and | [ |
| miR-199 | Ovarian cancer | Omental fibroblast derived from ovarian cancer | Electroporation | Inhibition of cell proliferation and invasion via suppression of c-Met | [ | |
| miR-21-sponge | Glioblastoma | HEK293T cells | Parental cells transfection using Lipofectamine | Declining cell proliferation and elevation in apoptotic rates via upregulation of PDCD4 and RECK | [ | |
| miR-128-3p | Colorectal cancer | FHC cells | Parental cells transfection using Lipofectamine | Upregulation of E-cadherin and inhibition oxaliplatin-induced epithelial mesenchymal transition by downregulation of Bmi1, and decreasing oxaliplatin efflux via suppression of MRP5 | [ | |
| miR-335-5p | Hepatocellular carcinoma | LX2 cells | Parental cells transfection using Lipofectamine | Inhibition of hepatocellular | [ | |
| miR-379 | Breast cancer cells | MSCs | Lentiviral transfection of parental cells | Suppression of tumor growth via downregulate cyclooxygenase-2 | [ | |
| miR-26a | HepG2 cells | 293T cells | Electroporation | Decreasing cell migration and | [ | |
| miR-124a | Glioblastoma | MSCs | Lentiviral transfection of parental cells | Significant reduction in viability due to abnormal lipid accumulation through silencing FOXA2 | [ | |
| miR-584 | Glioma | MSCs | Lentiviral transfection of parental cells | Inducing tumor cell apoptosis and reducing tumor cell invasion | [ | |
| miR-122 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | adipose tissue-derived MSCs | Parental cells transfection using Lipofectamine | Increasing chemosensitivity | [ | |
| let-7a | Breast cancer | HEK293 cells | Parental cells transfection using HiPerFect reagent | Suppressing tumor growth in vivo | [ | |
| miR-146b | Glioma | MSCs | Parental cells transfection using electroporation | Reducing tumor size via suppressing EGFR and NF-κB | [ |
Figure 2Unique and recently published pre-secretion loading methods. (A) Methods using tetraspanins. In the left pathway, L7Ae at the C-terminus of CD63 recognizes and binds to the C/D box of the mRNA, thereby loading the mRNA into the EV. In the right pathway, the target miRNA is overexpressed in the cell, and HuR fused with CD 9 binds to the miRNA. (B) Methods using other proteins. In the left pathway, the pre-miRNA loop is replaced with a TAR RNA loop and incorporated into the TAT-Lamp2A gene, loading the target miRNA into the EV. In the right pathway, VSV-G-GFP11, AGO2-GFP1-10, and the target miRNA are transfected into the parental cells. VSV-G-GFP11 binds to the lipid bilayer, and AGO2-GFP1-10 binds to VSV-G-GFP11. AGO2 introduces the overexpressed target miRNA into the EVs.
Figure 3Effective targeting of EVs to tumors. Modifying EVs with various molecules, such as ligands for tumor-specific receptors, antibodies against tumor-specific membrane proteins, and aptamers, can contribute to the active targeting of EVs. EV PEGylation inhibits clearance by macrophages and increases accumulation in tumors.
Tumor-targeting molecules and how to load onto EVs.
| Targeting Molecule | Target to | Cancer Type | How to Add Targeting | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody | ||||
| anti-Her2-scFv | Her2 | Breast cancer | Binding of anti-Her2-scFv to C1C2 domain of lactadherin that can bind to phosphatidylserine | [ |
| A33 antibody | A33 | Colorectal cancer | EVs isolated from A33 positive LIM1215 were coated with surface-carboxyl superparamagnetic iron oxide particles with A33 antibodies | [ |
| somatostatin receptor-2 antibody | somatostatin receptor-2 | Neuroendocrine cancer | Coincubation of anti-SSTR Ab with 1,2-Distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DSPE)-PEG-N-hydroxysuccinimide and mPEG-DSPE-EV | [ |
| EGFR targeting nanobody | EGFR | Lung cancer | Simple enzymatic method to bind peptides and nanobodies to EVs via covalent bonds using Sortase | [ |
| Peptide or other molecules | ||||
| c(RGDyK) peptide | αVβ3 integrin | Glioblastoma | Coincubated with micelles formed by DSPE-PEG2000-c(RGDyK) | [ |
| Folate | Folate receptor | Breast cancer | Coincubated with folate conjugated with DSPE-PEG2000 | [ |
| Folate | Folate receptor | Lung cancer | Covalently conjugation using standard stable amide chemistry | [ |
| RGERPPR peptide(RGE peptide) | Neuropilin-1 | Glioma | The alkyne group was conjugated with phosphatidylethanolamine on the exosome surface, and the RGE peptide with an azide group was conjugated with the alkyne group by a triazole linkages. | [ |
| iRGD peptide | αv integrin | Breast cancer | Parental cells were transfected with the vector expressing iRGD-Lamp2b fusion protein | [ |
| GE11 | EGFR | Breast cancer | Parental cells were transfected with the plasmid containing platelet-derived growth factor receptor transmembrane domain fused with GE-11 | [ |
| Interleukin-3 (IL3) | IL3-R | Chronic myeloid leukemia | Parental cells were transfected with the plasmid containing Lamp2b gene fused with the IL3 gene fragment | [ |
| T7 | Transferrin receptor | Glioblastoma | Parental cells were transfected with the plasmid containing Lamp2b gene fused with a T7 | [ |
| Aptamer | ||||
| AS1411 aptamer | nucleolin | Breast cancer | Extrusion of dendritic cells labeled with Aptamer conjugated with PEGylated cholesterol | [ |
| PSMA aptamer | PSMA | Prostate cancer | Conjugation of aptamer with pRNA-3WJ fused with cholesterol. | [ |
| MUC1 aptamer | MUC-1 | Colorectal cancer | Utilizing amine groups on the surface of EVs to bind via amide bonds | [ |
| scgc8 aptamer | Protein tyrosine kinase 7 | T-cell leukemia | Diacyllipid conjugated aptamer decorated onto EVs through hydrophobic interaction between the diacyllipid tail and the phospholipid bilayer of EVs. | [ |