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Aptamer‐RIBOTAC Strategy Enabling Tumor‐Specific Targeted Degradation of MicroRNA for Precise Cancer Therapy

Yuan Fang, Qiuyue Wu, Feiyu Wang, Ye Liu, Huimin Zhang, Chaoyong Yang, Zhi Zhu

2024Small Methods19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

MicroRNA (miRNA) molecules play crucial roles in a variety of diseases, making miRNA targeting a burgeoning field in medicinal chemistry. Ribonuclease targeting chimeras (RIBOTACs) present a compelling approach for RNA degradation. However, small molecule-based RIBOTAC requires an expensive and time-consuming screening process, and is difficult to directly target miRNA due to its short length lacking secondary structure. Antisense oligonucleotide (ASO)-based RIBOTAC is easy to design but with poor cell permeability. While both of them lack the specificity for tumor targeting. In this study, the first Aptamer-RIBOTAC (ARIBOTAC) chimera is designed based on ASO to achieve precise degradation of miRNA in a tumor cell-specific manner for precise cancer therapy. This chimera exhibits a remarkable ability to specifically identify and enter cancer cells, trigger localized activation of endogenous RNase L, and selectively cleave miRNAs that are complementary to ASO. The efficacy and universality of the ARIBOTAC strategy both in vitro and in vivo by degrading oncogenic miR-210-3p and miR-155-5p are validated. These findings underscore the potential of the ARIBOTAC strategy as a promising avenue for cancer therapy by precisely targeting cancer-associated miRNAs.

Topics & Concepts

microRNAChimera (genetics)AptamerOligonucleotideComputational biologyIn vivoBiologyCancer researchRNACancerRibonucleaseRNase PTargeted therapyRibonuclease IIIRNA interferenceMolecular biologyDNAGeneGeneticsAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryProtein Degradation and Inhibitors
Aptamer‐RIBOTAC Strategy Enabling Tumor‐Specific Targeted Degradation of MicroRNA for Precise Cancer Therapy | Litcius