Volume 13, Issue 3 (May 2011) 13, 481–486; 10.1038/aja.2010.167
Plasmid-based Stat3 siRNA delivered by hydroxyapatite nanoparticles suppresses mouse prostate tumour growth in vivo
Zuo-Wen Liang1,*, Bao-Feng Guo2,*, Yang Li1, Xiao-Jie Li1, Xin Li1, Li-Jing Zhao1, Li-Fang Gao1, Hao Yu1, Xue-Jian Zhao1, Ling Zhang1 and Bao-Xue Yang3
1 Prostate Diseases Prevention and Treatment Research Centre and Department of Pathophysiology, Norman Bethune Medical School, Jilin University, Changchun 130021, China 2 Department of Emergency Medicine, China–Japan Union Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun 130033, China 3 Department of Pharmacology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Peking University, Beijing 100191, China
Correspondence: Professor Ling Zhang, (zhangling3@jlu.edu.cn); Professor Bao-Xue Yang, (baoxue@bjmu.edu.cn)
Received 2 September 2010; Revised 3 November 2010; Accepted 9 November 2010; Published online 7 February 2011
Abstract |
DNA vector-based Stat3-specific RNA interference (si-Stat3) blocks Stat3 signalling and inhibits prostate tumour growth. However, the antitumour activity depends on the efficient delivery of si-Stat3. The effects on the growth of mouse prostate cancer cells of si-Stat3 delivered by hydroxyapatite were determined in this study. RM-1 tumour blocks were transplanted into C57BL/6 mice. CaCl2-modified hydroxyapatite carrying si-Stat3 plasmids were injected into tumours, and tumour growth and histology were determined. The expression levels of Stat3, pTyr-Stat3, Bcl-2, Bax, Caspase3, VEGF and cyclin D1 were measured by western blot analysis. Amounts of apoptosis in cancer cells were analysed with immunohistochemistry and the terminal deoxyribonucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-digoxigenin nick end-labelling (TUNEL) assay. The results showed that hydroxyapatite-delivered si-Stat3 significantly suppressed tumour growth up to 74% (P<0.01). Stat3 expression was dramatically downregulated in the tumours. The immunohistochemistry and TUNEL results showed that si-Stat3-induced apoptosis (up to 42%, P<0.01). The Stat3 downstream genes Bcl-2, VEGF and cyclin D1 were also strongly downregulated in the tumour tissues that also displayed significant increases in Bax expression and Caspase3 activity. These results suggest that hydroxyapatite can be used for the in vivo delivery of plasmid-based siRNAs into tumours.
Keywords: apoptosis; hydroxyapatite; prostate cancer; RNA interference; Stat3
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