1 research outputs found
Bioreducible Polymeric Nanoparticles Containing Multiplexed Cancer Stem Cell Regulating miRNAs Inhibit Glioblastoma Growth and Prolong Survival
Despite
our growing molecular-level understanding of glioblastoma
(GBM), treatment modalities remain limited. Recent developments in
the mechanisms of cell fate regulation and nanomedicine provide new
avenues by which to treat and manage brain tumors via the delivery
of molecular therapeutics. Here, we have developed bioreducible polyÂ(β-amino
ester) nanoparticles that demonstrate high intracellular delivery
efficacy, low cytotoxicity, escape from endosomes, and promotion of
cytosol-targeted environmentally triggered cargo release for miRNA
delivery to tumor-propagating human cancer stem cells. In this report,
we combined this nanobiotechnology with newly discovered cancer stem
cell inhibiting miRNAs to develop self-assembled miRNA-containing
polymeric nanoparticles (nano-miRs) to treat gliomas. We show that
these nano-miRs effectively intracellularly deliver single and combination
miRNA mimics that inhibit the stem cell phenotype of human GBM cells
in vitro. Following direct intratumoral infusion, these nano-miRs
were found to distribute through the tumors, inhibit the growth of
established orthotopic human GBM xenografts, and cooperatively enhance
the response to standard-of-care γ radiation. Co-delivery of
two miRNAs, miR-148a and miR-296-5p, within the bioreducible nano-miR
particles enabled long-term survival from GBM in mice