4.8 Article

Intelligent Gold Nanoparticles with Oncogenic MicroRNA-Dependent Activities to Manipulate Tumorigenic Environments for Synergistic Tumor Therapy

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202110219

Keywords

intelligent gold nanoparticles; miR-155-triggered chemotherapy; oncogenic microRNA (miR-155; miR-21); photothermal therapy; tumorigenic environment

Funding

  1. National High Level Talents Special Support Program
  2. Young Talent Support Plan of Xi'an Jiaotong University
  3. Knowledge Innovation Program of Shenzhen [JCYJ20170816100941258]

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This study utilizes spherical nucleic acids (SNAs) to effectively utilize and manipulate oncogenic microRNAs for tumor therapy. SNAs capture overexpressed miR-21/miR-155 and exert their effects through gene therapy and chemotherapy, while also achieving photothermal therapy and enhancing tumor treatment outcomes.
Tumorigenic environments, especially aberrantly overexpressed oncogenic microRNAs, play a critical role in various activities of tumor progression. However, developing strategies to effectively utilize and manipulate these oncogenic microRNAs for tumor therapy is still a challenge. To address this challenge, spherical nucleic acids (SNAs) consisting of gold nanoparticles in the core and antisense oligonucleotides as the shell are fabricated. Hybridized to the oligonucleotide shell is a DNA sequence to which doxorubicin is conjugated (DNA-DOX). The oligonucleotides shell is designed to capture overexpressed miR-21/miR-155 and inhibit the expression of these oncogenic miRNAs in tumor cells after tumor accumulation to manipulate genetic environment for accurate gene therapy. This process further induces the aggregation of these SNAs, which not only generates photothermal agents to achieve on-demand photothermal therapy in situ, but also enlarges the size of SNAs to enhance the retention time in the tumor for sustained therapy. The capture of the relevant miRNAs simultaneously triggers the intracellular release of the DNA-DOX from the SNAs to deliver tumor-specific chemotherapy. Both in vivo and in vitro results indicate that this combination strategy has excellent tumor inhibition properties with high survival rate of tumor-bearing mice, and can thus be a promising candidate for effective tumor treatment.

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