Nanotherapeutic Application Targets Multiple Cancer Genes
By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 06 Oct 2008
Nanoparticles filled with a drug that targets two genes, which trigger melanoma could provide a potential cure for that lethal disease, according to cancer researchers. The treatment, administered through an ultrasound device, has been shown to be a safer and more effective way of targeting cancer-causing genes in cancer cells without harming normal tissue. Posted on 06 Oct 2008
"It is a very selective and targeted approach,” said Dr. Gavin Robertson, associate professor of pharmacology, pathology, and dermatology, Penn State College of Medicine (Hershey, PA, USA). "And unlike most other cancer drugs that inadvertently affect a bunch of proteins, we are able to knock out single genes.”
The Penn State researchers hypothesized that "silencing RNA” (siRNA)--strands of RNA molecules that knock out specific genes--could turn off the two cancer-causing genes and potentially treat the deadly disease more effectively. "siRNA checks the expression of the two genes, which then lowers the abnormal levels of the cancer-causing proteins in cells,” explained Dr. Robertson, who is lead author of the study, which was published in the September 15, 2008, issue of the journal Cancer Research.
In recent years, researchers have honed in on two key genes--B-Raf and Akt3--that cause melanoma. B-Raf, the most frequently mutated gene in melanoma, produces the mutant protein, B-Raf, which helps mole cells survive and grow but does not form melanomas on its own. Dr. Robertson and colleagues earlier discovered that a protein called Akt3 controls the activity of the mutated B-Raf, which aids the development of melanoma.
The drug in this study specifically targets Akt3 and the mutant B-Raf and does therefore not affect normal cells, according to Dr. Robertson, who is also director of the Foreman Foundation Melanoma Therapeutics Program at the Penn State College of Medicine Cancer Institute. However, while knocking out specific genes may seem like a straightforward task, delivering the siRNA drug to cancerous cells is another problem, because protective layers in the skin not only keep drugs out, but chemicals in the skin quickly degrade the siRNA.
To overcome these two obstacles, Dr. Robertson and his team engineered hollow nano-sized particles--nanoliposomes--from globes of fatty acids into which they packed the siRNA. Next, the researchers used a portable ultrasound device to temporarily create microscopic holes in the surface of the skin, allowing the drug-filled particles to leak into tumor cells beneath. "Think of it as tiny basketballs that each protect the siRNA inside from getting degraded by the skin,” explained Dr. Robertson. "These basketballs fall through the holes created by the ultrasound and are taken up by the tumor cells, thereby delivering the siRNA drug into the tumor cells.”
When the researchers exposed lab-generated skin, made from human connective tissue, containing early cancerous lesions to the treatment 10 days after the skin was created, the siRNA reduced the ability of cells containing the mutant B-Raf to multiply by nearly 60-70%, and more than halved the size of lesions after three weeks. "This is essentially human skin with human melanoma cells, which provides an accurate picture of how the drug is acting,” said Dr. Robertson.
Mice with melanoma that underwent the same treatment had their tumors shrink by nearly 30% when only the mutant B-Raf was targeted. There was no difference in the development of melanoma when the Akt3 gene alone was targeted, although existing tumors shrank by approximately 10-15% in two weeks.
However, when the researchers targeted both the Akt3 and the mutant B-Raf at the same time, they found that tumors in the mice shrank about 60-70% more than when either gene was targeted alone. "If you knock down each of these two genes separately, you are able to reduce tumor development somewhat,” Dr. Robertson said. "But knocking them down together leads to synergistic reduction of tumor development.”
While human clinical trials could be years away, according to Dr. Robertson, the findings show the promise of personalized medicine, where patients could receive treatments created to specifically target the errant genes or proteins for their disease. "The problem with this cancer, like most cancers, is that if you target one protein, the cells quickly find a way around it,” explained Dr. Robertson. "Most chemotherapies are ineffective because patients initially respond but then when the tumor reoccurs, the cancer does not respond at all.”
In the future, Dr. Robertson believes physicians could identify three or four targets in a patient, which could be treated sequentially or in combination for a greater health benefit.
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Penn State College of Medicine