Publication | Open Access
Docosanoic acid conjugation to siRNA enables functional and safe delivery to skeletal and cardiac muscles
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Citations
60
References
2020
Year
Muscle TissueEngineeringBiomedical ResearchGene DeliveryBiomedical EngineeringTherapeuticsSkeletal MuscleOligonucleotide DeliveryAntisense TherapyMatrix BiologySafe DeliveryDocosanoic AcidMolecular PhysiologyRna BiologyVascular BiologyGene ExpressionPharmacologyCell BiologyPhysiologySmall RnaMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Oligonucleotide therapeutics hold promise for the treatment of muscle- and heart-related diseases. However, oligonucleotide delivery across the continuous endothelium of muscle tissue is challenging. Here, we demonstrate that docosanoic acid (DCA) conjugation of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) enables efficient (~5% of injected dose), sustainable (>1 month), and non-toxic (no cytokine induction at 100 mg/kg) gene silencing in both skeletal and cardiac muscles after systemic injection. When designed to target myostatin (muscle growth regulation gene), siRNAs induced ~55% silencing in various muscle tissues and 80% silencing in heart, translating into a ~50% increase in muscle volume within 1 week. Our study identifies compounds for RNAi-based modulation of gene expression in skeletal and cardiac muscles, paving the way for both functional genomics studies and therapeutic gene modulation in muscle and heart.
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