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Manipulation of Cell Physiology Enables Gene Silencing in Well-differentiated Airway Epithelia

The application of RNA interference-based gene silencing to the airway surface epithelium holds great promise to manipulate host and pathogen gene expression for therapeutic purposes. However, well-differentiated airway epithelia display significant barriers to double-stranded small-interfering RNA...

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Autores principales: Krishnamurthy, Sateesh, Behlke, Mark A, Ramachandran, Shyam, Salem, Aliasger K, McCray Jr, Paul B, Davidson, Beverly L
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3437804/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23344182
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/mtna.2012.36
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author Krishnamurthy, Sateesh
Behlke, Mark A
Ramachandran, Shyam
Salem, Aliasger K
McCray Jr, Paul B
Davidson, Beverly L
author_facet Krishnamurthy, Sateesh
Behlke, Mark A
Ramachandran, Shyam
Salem, Aliasger K
McCray Jr, Paul B
Davidson, Beverly L
author_sort Krishnamurthy, Sateesh
collection PubMed
description The application of RNA interference-based gene silencing to the airway surface epithelium holds great promise to manipulate host and pathogen gene expression for therapeutic purposes. However, well-differentiated airway epithelia display significant barriers to double-stranded small-interfering RNA (siRNA) delivery despite testing varied classes of nonviral reagents. In well-differentiated primary pig airway epithelia (PAE) or human airway epithelia (HAE) grown at the air–liquid interface (ALI), the delivery of a Dicer-substrate small-interfering RNA (DsiRNA) duplex against hypoxanthine–guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) with several nonviral reagents showed minimal uptake and no knockdown of the target. In contrast, poorly differentiated cells (2–5-day post-seeding) exhibited significant oligonucleotide internalization and target knockdown. This finding suggested that during differentiation, the barrier properties of the epithelium are modified to an extent that impedes oligonucleotide uptake. We used two methods to overcome this inefficiency. First, we tested the impact of epidermal growth factor (EGF), a known enhancer of macropinocytosis. Treatment of the cells with EGF improved oligonucleotide uptake resulting in significant but modest levels of target knockdown. Secondly, we used the connectivity map (Cmap) database to correlate gene expression changes during small molecule treatments on various cells types with genes that change upon mucociliary differentiation. Several different drug classes were identified from this correlative assessment. Well-differentiated epithelia treated with DsiRNAs and LY294002, a PI3K inhibitor, significantly improved gene silencing and concomitantly reduced target protein levels. These novel findings reveal that well-differentiated airway epithelia, normally resistant to siRNA delivery, can be pretreated with small molecules to improve uptake of synthetic oligonucleotide and RNA interference (RNAi) responses.
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spelling pubmed-34378042012-09-10 Manipulation of Cell Physiology Enables Gene Silencing in Well-differentiated Airway Epithelia Krishnamurthy, Sateesh Behlke, Mark A Ramachandran, Shyam Salem, Aliasger K McCray Jr, Paul B Davidson, Beverly L Mol Ther Nucleic Acids Original Article The application of RNA interference-based gene silencing to the airway surface epithelium holds great promise to manipulate host and pathogen gene expression for therapeutic purposes. However, well-differentiated airway epithelia display significant barriers to double-stranded small-interfering RNA (siRNA) delivery despite testing varied classes of nonviral reagents. In well-differentiated primary pig airway epithelia (PAE) or human airway epithelia (HAE) grown at the air–liquid interface (ALI), the delivery of a Dicer-substrate small-interfering RNA (DsiRNA) duplex against hypoxanthine–guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) with several nonviral reagents showed minimal uptake and no knockdown of the target. In contrast, poorly differentiated cells (2–5-day post-seeding) exhibited significant oligonucleotide internalization and target knockdown. This finding suggested that during differentiation, the barrier properties of the epithelium are modified to an extent that impedes oligonucleotide uptake. We used two methods to overcome this inefficiency. First, we tested the impact of epidermal growth factor (EGF), a known enhancer of macropinocytosis. Treatment of the cells with EGF improved oligonucleotide uptake resulting in significant but modest levels of target knockdown. Secondly, we used the connectivity map (Cmap) database to correlate gene expression changes during small molecule treatments on various cells types with genes that change upon mucociliary differentiation. Several different drug classes were identified from this correlative assessment. Well-differentiated epithelia treated with DsiRNAs and LY294002, a PI3K inhibitor, significantly improved gene silencing and concomitantly reduced target protein levels. These novel findings reveal that well-differentiated airway epithelia, normally resistant to siRNA delivery, can be pretreated with small molecules to improve uptake of synthetic oligonucleotide and RNA interference (RNAi) responses. Nature Publishing Group 2012-08 2012-08-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3437804/ /pubmed/23344182 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/mtna.2012.36 Text en Copyright © 2012 American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ Molecular Therapy-Nucleic Acids is an open-access journal published by Nature Publishing Group. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
spellingShingle Original Article
Krishnamurthy, Sateesh
Behlke, Mark A
Ramachandran, Shyam
Salem, Aliasger K
McCray Jr, Paul B
Davidson, Beverly L
Manipulation of Cell Physiology Enables Gene Silencing in Well-differentiated Airway Epithelia
title Manipulation of Cell Physiology Enables Gene Silencing in Well-differentiated Airway Epithelia
title_full Manipulation of Cell Physiology Enables Gene Silencing in Well-differentiated Airway Epithelia
title_fullStr Manipulation of Cell Physiology Enables Gene Silencing in Well-differentiated Airway Epithelia
title_full_unstemmed Manipulation of Cell Physiology Enables Gene Silencing in Well-differentiated Airway Epithelia
title_short Manipulation of Cell Physiology Enables Gene Silencing in Well-differentiated Airway Epithelia
title_sort manipulation of cell physiology enables gene silencing in well-differentiated airway epithelia
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3437804/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23344182
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/mtna.2012.36
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