4.7 Article

pH-Responsive Polymeric siRNA Carriers Sensitize Multidrug Resistant Ovarian Cancer Cells to Doxorubicin via Knockdown of Polo-like Kinase 1

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages 442-455

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/mp9002255

Keywords

siRNA delivery; pH-responsive polymers; multidrug resistance; polo-like kinase 1; doxorubicin; NCl/ADR-RES; pSMA

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [EB2991]
  2. Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation [DRG-1948-07]

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Small interfering RNA (siRNA)-based therapies have great potential for the treatment of debilitating diseases such as cancer, but an effective delivery strategy for siRNA is elusive. Here, pH-responsive complexes were developed for the delivery of siRNA in order to sensitize drug-resistant ovarian cancer cells (NCl/ADR-RES) to doxorubicin. The electrostatic complexes consisted of a cationic micelle used as a nucleating core, siRNA, and a pH-responsive endosomolytic polymer. Cationic micelles were formed from diblock copolymers of dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate (pDMAEMA) and butyl methacrylate (pDbB). The hydrophobic butyl core mediated micelle formation while the positively charged pDMAEMA corona enabled siRNA condensation. To enhance cytosolic delivery through endosomal release, a pH-responsive copolymer of poly(styrene-aft-maleic anhydride) (pSMA) was electrostatically complexed with the positively charged siRNA/micelle to form a ternary complex. Complexes exhibited size (30-105 nm) and charge (slightly positive) properties important for endocytosis and were found to be noncytotoxic and mediate uptake in >70% of ovarian cancer cells after 1 h of incubation. The pH-responsive ternary complexes were used to deliver siRNA against polo-like kinase 1 (plk1), a gene upregulated in many cancers and responsible for cell cycle progression, to ovarian cancer cell lines. Treatment resulted in similar to 50% reduction of plk1 gene expression in the drug-resistant NCl/ADR-RES ovarian cancer cell model and in the drug-sensitive parental cell line, OVCAR8. This knockdown functionally sensitized NCl/ADR-RES cells to doxorubicin at levels similar to OVCAR8. Sensitization occurred through a p53 signaling pathway, as indicated by caspase 3/7 upregulation following plk1 knockdown and doxorubicin treatment, and this effect could be abrogated using a p53 inhibitor. To demonstrate the potential for dual delivery from this polymer system, micelle cores were subsequently loaded with doxorubicin and utilized in ternary complexes to achieve cell sensitization through simultaneous siRNA and drug delivery from a single carrier. These results show knockdown of plk1 results in sensitization of multidrug resistant cells to doxorubicin, and this combination of gene silencing and small molecule drug delivery may prove useful to achieve potent therapeutic effects.

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