Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
23838 | Journal of Biotechnology | 2011 | 6 Pages |
A prerequisite for the therapeutic use of small RNAs is the development of a method that can deliver them into animals. Previous studies have shown the capability of functionalized gold nanoparticles to serve as a general platform for loading and delivering DNA oligonucleotides and short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) into cultured human cells. Here, we report the ability of the gold nanoparticle-assisted gene delivery system (AuNP-GDS) to deliver shRNA to a xenograft tumor in a mouse model. AuNP-GDS delivery of in vitro synthesized shRNA targeted to the Mcl-1L gene knocked down levels of Mcl-1L mRNA and protein by ∼36% and ∼26%, respectively, which were sufficient to induce apoptosis of the xenograft tumor cells and consequently inhibited the development of the tumor. We demonstrated that our lego-like AuNP-GDS, which can easily load and deliver shRNAs targeted to any gene of interest into living systems, can deliver shRNAs into xenograft tumors, leading to antitumor activity in an animal model.
► We show that a functionalized gold nanoparticle can deliver shRNAs in a mouse model. ► We show that delivery of shRNAs targeted to Mcl-1L gene leads to antitumor activity. ► Our “lego-like” system can load and deliver any sequences of RNA into living systems.