posted on 2012-08-22, 00:00authored byMing Yan, Min Liang, Jing Wen, Yang Liu, Yunfeng Lu, Irvin S. Y. Chen
Synthetic siRNA has been considered as a highly promising
therapeutic
agent for human diseases. However, clinical use of siRNA has been
hampered by instability in the body and inability to deliver sufficient
RNA interference compounds to the tissues or cells. To address this
challenge, we present here a single siRNA nanocapsule delivery technology,
which is achieved by encapsulating a single siRNA molecule within
a degradable polymer nanocapsule with a diameter around 20 nm and
positive surface charge. As proof-of-concept, since CCR5 is considered
a major silencing target of HIV therapy, CCR5–siRNA nanocapsules
were delivered into 293T cells and successfully downregulated the
CCR5 RNA fused with mCherry reporter RNA. In the absence of human
serum, nanocapsules and lipofectamine silenced expression of CCR5–mCherry
expression to 8% and 15%, respectively. Such nanocapsules maintain
the integrity of siRNA inside even after incubation with ribonuclease
and serum for 1 h; under the same conditions, siRNA is degraded in
the native form or when formulated with lipofectamine. In the presence
of serum, CCR5–siRNA nanocapsules knocked down CCR5–mCherry
expression to less than 15% while siRNAs delivered through lipofectamine
slightly knocked down the expression to 55%. In summary, this work
provides a novel platform for siRNA delivery that can be developed
for therapeutic purposes.