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RNA Interference Nanotherapeutics for Treatment of Glioblastoma Multiforme

Prabhjeet Singh, Aditi Singh, Shruti Shah, Jalpa Vataliya, Anupama Mittal, Deepak Chitkara

2020Molecular Pharmaceutics38 citationsDOI

Abstract

Nucleic acid therapeutics for RNA interference (RNAi) are gaining attention in the treatment and management of several kinds of the so-called “undruggable” tumors via targeting specific molecular pathways or oncogenes. Synthetic ribonucleic acid (RNAs) oligonucleotides like siRNA, miRNA, shRNA, and lncRNA have shown potential as novel therapeutics. However, the delivery of such oligonucleotides is significantly hampered by their physiochemical (such as hydrophilicity, negative charge, and instability) and biopharmaceutical features (in vivo serum stability, fast renal clearance, interaction with extracellular proteins, and hindrance in cellular internalization) that markedly reduce their biological activity. Recently, several nanocarriers have evolved as suitable non-viral vectors for oligonucleotide delivery, which are known to either complex or conjugate with these oligonucleotides efficiently and also overcome the extracellular and intracellular barriers, thereby allowing access to the tumoral micro-environment for the better and desired outcome in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). This Review focuses on the up-to-date advancements in the field of RNAi nanotherapeutics utilized for GBM treatment.

Topics & Concepts

RNA interferenceOligonucleotideNanocarriersSmall hairpin RNANucleic acidRNASmall interfering RNAChemistryGlioblastomaInternalizationComputational biologyCell biologyBiologyDrug deliveryCellCancer researchBiochemistryDNAGeneOrganic chemistryRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryMicroRNA in disease regulationAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
RNA Interference Nanotherapeutics for Treatment of Glioblastoma Multiforme | Litcius