Evaluation of double heptamer-type sgRNA as a potential therapeutic agent against multiple myeloma

Publication date: Available online 12 June 2019Source: Blood Cells, Molecules, and DiseasesAuthor(s): Tatsuya Ishikawa, Arisa Haino, Takashi Ichiyanagi, Mineaki Seki, Masayuki NashimotoAbstractEmergence of drug-resistant mutations in the course of myeloma cell evolution and subsequent relapse of myeloma appears to be currently inevitable in most patients. To remedy this situation, we are trying to develop therapeutic small guide RNAs (sgRNAs) based on tRNase ZL-utilizing efficacious gene silencing (TRUE gene silencing), an RNA-mediated gene expression control technology. We designed two sets of double heptamer-type sgRNA, which target the human BCL2 mRNA. Both sets of double heptamer-type sgRNA reduced viability of human myeloma cell lines, RPMI-8226 and KMM-1. We also performed a mouse xenograft experiment to examine how the double heptamer-type sgRNA DHa1(BCL2)/DHa2(BCL2) can reduce the growth of KMM-1 cells in vivo. Median survival periods of the sgRNA cohorts were greater than that of the control cohort by 11–43 days. Furthermore, we designed two sets of double heptamer-type sgRNA, which target the human CCND1 mRNA, and both sets synergistically reduced RPMI-8226 cell viability.
Source: Blood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases - Category: Hematology Source Type: research
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