Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Novel therapies are needed for acute myeloid leukemia as only ~60% of children are cured despite maximally intensive cytotoxic chemotherapy. Functionalized gold nanoparticles (AuNP) are utilized for many biomedical applications and represent a potentially novel therapeutic approach in leukemia. We enhanced this technology by developing an AuNP system that selectively releases molecularly targeted drugs in leukemia cells.
METHODS: AuNPs were functionalized with short, double-stranded oligonucleotides with sequence complementarity to genes overexpressed in or unique to a leukemia cell (e.g. survivin or AML/ETO). Only the anti-sense oligonucleotide is covalently bound to the nanoparticle via a thiol linker. Thus, after entering leukemia cells, the endogenous targeted oncogene mRNA can bind to its complementary sequence on the AuNP and displace the non-covalently bound oligonucleotide which, in our system, is conjugated to the multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor dasatinib. As a binary reaction, the amount of dasatinib-conjugated oligonucleotide released from the nanoparticle is directly proportional to both the presence and abundance of the complementary mRNA present in a cell. We evaluated AuNP uptake into multiple AML cell lines, as well as normal hematopoietic cells. The effect of dasatinib-AuNPs on dasatinib-sensitive leukemia cell lines was evaluated using proliferation assays, annexin V staining, and cell colony assays. Toxicity in T-cells and CD34+ cells was assessed with T-cell activation and p-SRC assays, respectively.
RESULTS: Conjugation of dasatinib to an oligonucleotide complementary to a region of the survivin gene did not perturb its ability to inhibit SRC and c-KIT kinases in vitro. Leukemia cells demonstrate highly efficient AuNP uptake when cultured alone or with up to a 100-1000 fold excess of normal bone marrow cells. Treatment of K562 leukemia cells, containing a BCR/ABL translocation and high levels of survivin mRNA, with dasatinib-AuNPs resulted in dose-dependent p-SRC and p-CRKL inhibition. Furthermore, K562 cells also showed significantly impaired proliferation, increased apoptosis, and formed fewer colonies in methylcellulose. Conversely, normal T-cells and CD34+ cells, which express less survivin than leukemia cells, were significantly less affected by dasatinib-AuNPs than dasatinib alone as measured by T-cell activation assays and p-SRC levels, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: This method of using functionalized AuNPs to deliver and activate dasatinib in leukemia cells augments drug efficacy while minimizing toxicity and thus represents a novel therapeutic strategy for AML. Ongoing work is underway to characterize the mechanism of preferential AuNP uptake in leukemia cells and assessing in vivo activity using a murine xenotransplantation model of leukemia.
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.