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Gene editing particle system as a therapeutic approach for drug-resistant colorectal cancer
  • Ryu, Jee Yeon ;
  • Choi, You Jung ;
  • Won, Eun Jeong ;
  • Hui, Emmanuel ;
  • Kim, Ho Shik ;
  • Cho, Young Seok ;
  • Yoon, Tae Jong
Citations

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13

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Publication Year
2020-06-01
Publisher
Tsinghua University Press
Citation
Nano Research, Vol.13, pp.1576-1585
Keyword
clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat and associated Cas9 nuclease (CRISPR/Cas9)colorectal cancerdrug-resistanceKRAS mutationnanoliposome
Mesh Keyword
Colorectal cancerDrug resistanceKRAS mutationnanoliposomePalindromic
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and OpticsMaterials Science (all)Condensed Matter PhysicsElectrical and Electronic Engineering
Abstract
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway plays an important role in the progression of colorectal cancer (CRC). Anti-EGFR drugs based on antibodies have been widely used for treating CRC through inducing the cell death pathway. However, the majority of CRC patients will inevitably develop drug-resistance during anti-EGFR drug treatment, which is mainly caused by a point mutation in the KRAS oncogene. We developed a nanoliposomal (NL) particle containing the Cas9 protein and a single-guide RNA (sgRNA) complex (Cas9-RNP), for genomic editing of the KRAS mutation. The NL particle is composed of bio-compatible lipid compounds that can effectively encapsulate Cas9-RNP. By modifying the NL particle to include the appropriate antibody, it can specifically recognize EGFR expressing CRC and effectively deliver the gene-editing complexes. The conditions of NL treatment were optimized using a KRAS mutated CRC in vivo mouse model. Mice with KRAS-mutated CRC showed drug resistance against cetuximab, a therapeutic antibody drug. After treating the mice with the KRAS gene-editing NL particles, the implanted tumors showed a dramatic decrease in size. Our results demonstrated that this genomic editing complex has great potential as a therapeutic carrier system for the treatment of drug-resistant cancer caused by a point mutation. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/31244
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12274-020-2773-1
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
This work was supported by the Industrial Strategic Technology Development Program (Project No. 10047679) of the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (MI, Republic of Korea), partially supported by the GRRC program of Gyeonggi province (GRRC 2016B02, Photonics-Medical Convergence Technology Research Center), and was partly supported by grant (No. 2019R1F1A1058879) from the National Foundation Research of Korea.
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