WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Using strands of genetic material, Purdue University
scientists have constructed tiny delivery vehicles that can carry anticancer
therapeutic agents directly to infected cells, offering a potential wealth of
new treatments for chronic diseases.
The vehicles look nothing like delivery trucks, though
that is their function once inside the body. Instead,
these so-called nanoparticles, which are assembled
from three short pieces of ribonucleic acid, resemble
miniature triangles. The microscopic particles possess
both the right size to gain entry into cells and
also the right structure to carry other therapeutic
strands of RNA inside with them, where they are able
to halt viral growth or cancer's progress. The team
has already tested the nanoparticles successfully
against cancer growth in mice and lab-grown human
cells.
"RNA has immense promise as a therapeutic agent
against cancer, but until now we have not had an
efficient system to bring multiple therapeutic agents
directly into specific cancer cells where they can
perform different tasks," said research team
leader Peixuan Guo, who is a professor of molecular
virology at Purdue with joint appointments in Purdue's
Cancer Research Center, School of Veterinary Medicine
and Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering. "Physicians
have hoped that nanotechnology might provide a solution
to the problem, and it's possible that the application
of these tiny triangles could lead to the solution."
"With these devices, Dr. Guo was able to deliver
three different therapeutic agents into a cell at
the same time," said Jean Chin, a scientist
at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences,
which is part of the National Institutes of Health. "This
is an incredible accomplishment that points to the
versatility and potential medical value of these
nanoparticles."
The research appears in two related papers being
published in the scientific journals Nano Letters
and Human Gene Therapy. Members of Guo's research
team are from Purdue, the University of Central Florida
and the University of California, Riverside, including
Songchuan Guo, Annette Khaled, Feng Li, Sulma Mohammed
and Nuska Tschammer.
Guo's team created their nanoparticles by linking
together different kinds of RNA, a task that their
previous research has given them ample opportunities
to practice. Several years after building a tiny "motor" from
several strands of RNA that mimic those in a bacteria-killing
virus called phi29, the team learned how to manipulate
these stringy molecules into different shapes, including
rods, triangles and arrays.
"We speculated at that time that these shapes
would be useful purely as physical scaffolding on
which more sophisticated nanodevices could be constructed," Guo
said. "But RNA, which carries genetic messages
within cells, also has many therapeutic functions.
We realized that if we built different kinds of therapeutic
RNA onto the RNA scaffolding and created a single
structure, we might be able to respond to several
challenges that have confronted the medical field."
RNA molecules come in many variant forms, and the
sort that the team mimicked from the phi29 virus – called
pRNA – also can be linked to other types of
RNA to form longer, hybrid strands with properties
the researchers could assign.
"We looked around for RNA strands that would
behave in certain ways when they encounter a cancer
cell because each of them needs to perform one step
of the therapy," Guo explained. "An effective
agent against cancer needs to accomplish several
tasks. It needs first to recognize the cancer cell
and gain access to its interior, and then it needs
to destroy it. But we'd also like the agent to leave
a trail for us, to mark the path the molecule has
taken somehow. That way, we can pinpoint the location
of the cancer and trace the outcome after the treatment."
To accomplish these tasks, the team turned to other
forms of RNA that can interfere with the goings-on
inside cells. The team sorted through a variety of
RNA forms that have shown promise for disease treatment
and found three that could perform each of the desired
tasks. One example is "small interfering RNA," or
siRNA, which deactivates certain genes in cells.
The others are RNA aptamers, which bind to cancer
cell surface markers, and ribozymes, which can be
designed to degrade specific RNA in cancer cells
or viruses.
"We linked each of the three therapeutic strands
with a piece of pRNA, forming three hybrid strands," Guo
said. "Then, using techniques we learned from
our earlier work, we were able to combine all three
into triangles that are between 25 and 40 nanometers
wide. This is the Goldilocks size for any nanoparticle
that is to be used in the body – not too big,
not too small."
Particles larger than about 100 nanometers are generally
too large to pass through cell membranes into the
cell's interior, Guo said, and the body has a hard
time retaining particles smaller than 10 nanometers.
But the tiny triangles fit, and they worked well
enough to interrupt the growth of human breast cancer
cells and leukemia model lymphocytes in laboratory
experiments.
"One characteristic of cancer cells is that
they do not stop growing, which is one reason tumors
develop," Guo said. "Once inside, the siRNA
essentially instructs the cells to 'stop not stopping.'
The nanoparticles had done their work on the breast
cancer cell cultures within a few days."
Additionally, the team found that the nanoparticles
completely block cancer development in living mice.
A group of mice that were in the process of developing
cancer were tested with the nanoparticles, and they
did not develop the disease. A second group that
was tested with mutated inactive RNA all developed
tumors.
"The results are very promising, but we still
have several hurdles to jump before we can test this
therapy on people," Guo said. "First and
foremost, we must ensure that it is as safe as we
think it is. Some RNA can be toxic to noncancerous
cells as well, and though our nanoparticles appear
to go straight to the cancer cells where we want
them to go, we have to be sure they do not go anywhere
else before we can inject them into a living person."
Stability of the RNA also is a factor the team must
consider. Although they previously published data
indicating that phi29 RNA nanoparticles are more
stable than other RNA, Guo said the team still needs
to find better ways to protect the RNA from degradation
by enzymes in the body.
Although the group still needs to prove the safety
of their tiny creations, Guo said, they remain confident
that their work is a milestone for medical nanotechnology.
The team has already obtained further results that
could help create safer RNA nanoparticles.
"Many studies have shown that therapeutic forms
of RNA, such as siRNA or ribozymes, could be put
together to kill cancer, but the main obstacle has
been finding the delivery method that can bring them
to specific cells simultaneously," Guo said. "Nanotechnology
is beginning to pay off here in that it may have
provided us with a solution to the problem. We hope
to enhance the work we have done so far and refine
it for human trials."
The team's work is supported in part by grants from
the National Institutes of Health and the Department
of Defense.
Guo is affiliated with Purdue's Cancer Center and
Birck Nanotechnology Center.
The Cancer Center, one of just eight National Cancer
Institute-designated basic-research facilities in
the United States, attempts to help cancer patients
by identifying new molecular targets and designing
future agents and drugs for effectively detecting
and treating cancer.
The Birck Nanotechnology Center is located in Purdue's
new Discovery Park, located on the southwestern edge
of campus. Programs include undergraduate teaching,
graduate research and technology-transfer initiatives
with industry partners. Scientists in biology, chemistry,
physics and several engineering disciplines participate
in the research.
Writer: Chad Boutin, (765) 494-2081, cboutin@purdue.edu
Source: Peixuan Guo, (765) 494-7561, guop@purdue.edu
Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; purduenews@purdue.edu
Previous news stories on Guo's research:
RNA could form scaffolding for nanomachines
Purdue researchers connect life's blueprints with
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