Targeted tumor-penetrating siRNA nanocomplexes for credentialing the ovarian cancer oncogene ID4

PUBLICATION TYPE:

Journal Article

AUTHORS:

Yin Ren, Hiu Wing Cheung, Geoffrey von Maltzhan, Amit Agrawal, Glenn S. Cowley, Barbara A. Weir, Jesse S. Boehm, Pablo Tamayo, Alison M. Karst, Joyce F. Liu, Michelle S. Hirsch, Jill P. Mesirov, Ronny Drapkin, David E. Root, Justin Lo, Valentina Fogal, Erkki Ruoslahti, William C. Hahn,* Sangeeta N. Bhatia*

SOURCE:

Sci. Transl. Med. 4, 147ra112 (2012)

URL:

https://stm.sciencemag.org/content/4/147/147ra112

ABSTRACT:

The comprehensive characterization of a large number of cancer genomes will eventually lead to a compendium of genetic alterations in specific cancers. Unfortunately, the number and complexity of identified alterations complicate endeavors to identify biologically relevant mutations critical for tumor maintenance because many of these targets are not amenable to manipulation by small molecules or antibodies. RNA interference provides a direct way to study putative cancer targets; however, specific delivery of therapeutics to the tumor parenchyma remains an intractable problem. We describe a platform for the discovery and initial validation of cancer targets, composed of a systematic effort to identify amplified and essential genes in human cancer cell lines and tumors partnered with a novel modular delivery technology. We developed a tumor-penetrating nanocomplex (TPN) that comprised small interfering RNA (siRNA) complexed with a tandem tumor-penetrating and membrane-translocating peptide, which enabled the specific delivery of siRNA deep into the tumor parenchyma. We used TPN in vivo to evaluate inhibitor of DNA binding 4 (ID4) as a novel oncogene. Treatment of ovarian tumor–bearing mice with ID4-specific TPN suppressed growth of established tumors and significantly improved survival. These observations not only credential ID4 as an oncogene in 32% of high-grade ovarian cancers but also provide a framework for the identification, validation, and understanding of potential therapeutic cancer targets.

Manuscript

Supporting information

Previous
Previous

Nanoparticles that communicate in vivo to amplify tumour targeting

Next
Next

Mass-encoded synthetic biomarkers for multiplexed urinary monitoring of disease