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Liposome-siRNA-Peptide Complexes Cross the Blood-Brain Barrier and Significantly Decrease PrPC on Neuronal Cells and PrPRES in Infected Cell Cultures
Authors:Bruce Pulford  Natalia Reim  Aimee Bell  Jessica Veatch  Genevieve Forster  Heather Bender  Crystal Meyerett  Scott Hafeman  Brady Michel  Theodore Johnson  A. Christy Wyckoff  Gino Miele  Christian Julius  Jan Kranich  Alan Schenkel  Steven Dow  Mark D. Zabel
Affiliation:1. Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America.; 2. Pfizer Global Research & Development, Translational Medicine Research Collaboration, Dundee, Scotland.; 3. Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia.;Duke University Medical Center, United States of America
Abstract:

Background

Recent advances toward an effective therapy for prion diseases employ RNA interference to suppress PrPC expression and subsequent prion neuropathology, exploiting the phenomenon that disease severity and progression correlate with host PrPC expression levels. However, delivery of lentivirus encoding PrP shRNA has demonstrated only modest efficacy in vivo.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Here we describe a new siRNA delivery system incorporating a small peptide that binds siRNA and acetylcholine receptors (AchRs), acting as a molecular messenger for delivery to neurons, and cationic liposomes that protect siRNA-peptide complexes from serum degradation.

Conclusions/Significance

Liposome-siRNA-peptide complexes (LSPCs) delivered PrP siRNA specifically to AchR-expressing cells, suppressed PrPC expression and eliminated PrPRES formation in vitro. LSPCs injected intravenously into mice resisted serum degradation and delivered PrP siRNA throughout the brain to AchR and PrPC-expressing neurons. These data promote LSPCs as effective vehicles for delivery of PrP and other siRNAs specifically to neurons to treat prion and other neuropathological diseases.
Keywords:
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