1 research outputs found
Galactose Derivative-Modified Nanoparticles for Efficient siRNA Delivery to Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Successful siRNA
therapy requires suitable delivery systems with
targeting moieties such as small molecules, peptides, antibodies,
or aptamers. Galactose (Gal) residues recognized by the asialoglycoprotein
receptor (ASGPR) can serve as potent targeting moieties for hepatocellular
carcinoma (HCC) cells. However, efficient targeting to HCC via galactose
moieties rather than normal liver tissues in HCC patients remains
a challenge. To achieve more efficient siRNA delivery in HCC, we synthesized
various galactoside derivatives and investigated the siRNA delivery
capability of nanoparticles modified with those galactoside derivatives.
In this study, we assembled lipid/calcium/phosphate nanoparticles
(LCP NPs) conjugated with eight types of galactoside derivatives and
demonstrated that phenyl β-d-galactoside-decorated
LCP NPs (L4-LCP NPs) exhibited a superior siRNA delivery into HCC
cells compared to normal hepatocytes. VEGF siRNAs delivered by L4-LCP
NPs downregulated VEGF expression in HCC in vitro and in vivo and
led to a potent antiangiogenic effect in the tumor microenvironment
of a murine orthotopic HCC model. The efficient delivery of VEGF siRNA
by L4-LCP NPs that resulted in significant tumor regression indicates
that phenyl galactoside could be a promising HCC-targeting ligand
for therapeutic siRNA delivery to treat liver cancer