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A comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering RNA

Cellular delivery of small interfering RNAs to target cells of a tissue has the potential to travel by two intercellular pathways. For intimately apposed cells gap junctions allow transport exclusive of the extracellular space. For cells not in intimate contact, exocytotic release of vesicular conte...

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Autores principales: Valiunas, Virginijus, Wang, Hong-Zhang, Li, Ling, Gordon, Chris, Valiuniene, Laima, Cohen, Ira S, Brink, Peter R
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4393195/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25649248
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.12286
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author Valiunas, Virginijus
Wang, Hong-Zhang
Li, Ling
Gordon, Chris
Valiuniene, Laima
Cohen, Ira S
Brink, Peter R
author_facet Valiunas, Virginijus
Wang, Hong-Zhang
Li, Ling
Gordon, Chris
Valiuniene, Laima
Cohen, Ira S
Brink, Peter R
author_sort Valiunas, Virginijus
collection PubMed
description Cellular delivery of small interfering RNAs to target cells of a tissue has the potential to travel by two intercellular pathways. For intimately apposed cells gap junctions allow transport exclusive of the extracellular space. For cells not in intimate contact, exocytotic release of vesicular contents and subsequent retrieval via endocytosis of exosomes and other vesicular contents represent an alternative intercellular delivery system that utilizes the extracellular space. Previous studies have shown siRNA/miRNA transfer from a delivery cell to a target cell via gap junction channels. We hypothesized that siRNA can be delivered via gap junctions and downregulate the expression of a reporter gene, the cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channel gene (mHCN2), in the recipient cells of cell pairs. Whole-cell patch clamp was used to measure the mHCN2-induced current and junctional conductance. The target cells were HEK293 cells that endogenously express Cx43 or HeLaCx43 cells, both transfected with mHCN2. The source cells were HEK293 or HeLaCx43 cells transfected with fluorescent-labeled siRNA targeting mHCN2. We found that siRNA targeting mHCN2 resulted in significant downregulation of mHCN2 currents both in single cells and the recipient cell of a cell pair. In addition we also documented downregulation in target cells that were not in contact with source cells suggesting an extracellular-mediated delivery. To test further for extracellular delivery HEK293/HCN2 or HeLaCx43/HCN2 cells were cultured in medium collected from HEK293 or HeLaCx43 cells transfected with fluorescent-labeled siRNA or fluorescent-labeled morpholino designed to target HCN2. After 24 h single HEK293/HCN2 or HeLaCx43cells showed accumulation of siRNA. The mHCN2 currents were also down regulated in cells with siRNA uptake. Application of 200 nmol/L Bafilomycin A1, which has been shown to affect endosome acidification and endocytotic activity, resulted in a smaller accumulation of fluorescent-labeled siRNA in single target cells. In distinction to siRNA, morpholinos targeting HCN2 exhibited greatly reduced extracellularly mediated transfer while in cell pairs, target cells exhibited reduced HCN2 currents consistent with effective gap junction-mediated delivery.
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spelling pubmed-43931952015-04-20 A comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering RNA Valiunas, Virginijus Wang, Hong-Zhang Li, Ling Gordon, Chris Valiuniene, Laima Cohen, Ira S Brink, Peter R Physiol Rep Original Research Cellular delivery of small interfering RNAs to target cells of a tissue has the potential to travel by two intercellular pathways. For intimately apposed cells gap junctions allow transport exclusive of the extracellular space. For cells not in intimate contact, exocytotic release of vesicular contents and subsequent retrieval via endocytosis of exosomes and other vesicular contents represent an alternative intercellular delivery system that utilizes the extracellular space. Previous studies have shown siRNA/miRNA transfer from a delivery cell to a target cell via gap junction channels. We hypothesized that siRNA can be delivered via gap junctions and downregulate the expression of a reporter gene, the cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channel gene (mHCN2), in the recipient cells of cell pairs. Whole-cell patch clamp was used to measure the mHCN2-induced current and junctional conductance. The target cells were HEK293 cells that endogenously express Cx43 or HeLaCx43 cells, both transfected with mHCN2. The source cells were HEK293 or HeLaCx43 cells transfected with fluorescent-labeled siRNA targeting mHCN2. We found that siRNA targeting mHCN2 resulted in significant downregulation of mHCN2 currents both in single cells and the recipient cell of a cell pair. In addition we also documented downregulation in target cells that were not in contact with source cells suggesting an extracellular-mediated delivery. To test further for extracellular delivery HEK293/HCN2 or HeLaCx43/HCN2 cells were cultured in medium collected from HEK293 or HeLaCx43 cells transfected with fluorescent-labeled siRNA or fluorescent-labeled morpholino designed to target HCN2. After 24 h single HEK293/HCN2 or HeLaCx43cells showed accumulation of siRNA. The mHCN2 currents were also down regulated in cells with siRNA uptake. Application of 200 nmol/L Bafilomycin A1, which has been shown to affect endosome acidification and endocytotic activity, resulted in a smaller accumulation of fluorescent-labeled siRNA in single target cells. In distinction to siRNA, morpholinos targeting HCN2 exhibited greatly reduced extracellularly mediated transfer while in cell pairs, target cells exhibited reduced HCN2 currents consistent with effective gap junction-mediated delivery. BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4393195/ /pubmed/25649248 http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.12286 Text en © 2015 The Authors. Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American Physiological Society and The Physiological Society. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Valiunas, Virginijus
Wang, Hong-Zhang
Li, Ling
Gordon, Chris
Valiuniene, Laima
Cohen, Ira S
Brink, Peter R
A comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering RNA
title A comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering RNA
title_full A comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering RNA
title_fullStr A comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering RNA
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering RNA
title_short A comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering RNA
title_sort comparison of two cellular delivery mechanisms for small interfering rna
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4393195/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25649248
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.12286
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