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Novel nanopolymer RNA therapeutics normalize human diabetic corneal wound healing and epithelial stem cells

Authors: 
Kramerov AA, Shah R, Ding H, Holler E, Turjman S, Rabinowitz YS, Ghiam S, Maguen E, Svendsen CN, Saghizadeh M, Ljubimova JY, Ljubimov AV
Citation: 
Nanomedicine. 2020;[Epub] doi:10.1016/j.nano.2020.102332
Abstract: 
Human diabetic corneas develop delayed wound healing, epithelial stem cell dysfunction, recurrent erosions, and keratitis. Adenoviral gene therapy modulating c-Met, cathepsin F and MMP-10 normalized wound healing and epithelial stem cells in organ-cultured diabetic corneas but showed toxicity in stem cell-enriched cultured limbal epithelial cells (LEC). For a safer treatment, we engineered a novel nanobiopolymer (NBC) that carried antisense oligonucleotide (AON) RNA therapeutics suppressing cathepsin F or MMP-10, and miR-409-3p that inhibits c-Met. NBC was internalized by LEC through transferrin receptor (TfR)-mediated endocytosis, inhibited cathepsin F or MMP-10 and upregulated c-Met. Non-toxic NBC modulating c-Met and cathepsin F accelerated wound healing in diabetic LEC and organ-cultured corneas vs. control NBC. NBC treatment normalized levels of stem cell markers (keratins 15 and 17, ABCG2, and ΔNp63), and signaling mediators (p-EGFR, p-Akt and p-p38). Non-toxic nano RNA therapeutics thus present a safe alternative to viral gene therapy for normalizing diabetic corneal cells.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: diabetic limbal epithelial cells; organ culture: cornea
Delivery Method: 
nanopolymer