Molecular and Cellular Probes (Oct 2024)

Genetic switch selectively kills hepatocellular carcinoma cell based on microRNA and tissue-specific promoter

  • Yuan-yuan Lu,
  • Yi Li,
  • Zhi-li Chen,
  • Xiang-hua Xiong,
  • Qing-yang Wang,
  • Hao-long Dong,
  • Chen Zhu,
  • Jia-zhen Cui,
  • Ao Hu,
  • Lei Wang,
  • Na Song,
  • Gang Liu,
  • Hui-peng Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 77
p. 101981

Abstract

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The clinical treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is still a heavy burden worldwide. Intracellular microRNAs (miRNAs) commonly express abnormally in cancers, thus they are potential therapeutic targets for cancer treatment. miR-21 is upregulated in HCC whereas miR-122 is enriched in normal hepatocyte but downregulated in HCC. In our study, we first generated a reporter genetic switch compromising of miR-21 and miR-122 sponges as sensor, green fluorescent protein (GFP) as reporter gene and L7Ae:K-turn as regulatory element. The reporter expression was turned up in miR-21 enriched environment while turned down in miR-122 enriched environment, indicating that the reporter switch is able to respond distinctly to different miRNA environment. Furthermore, an AAT promoter, which is hepatocyte-specific, is applied to increase the specificity to hepatocyte. A killing switch with AAT promoter and an apoptosis-inducing element, Bax, in addition to miR-21 and miR-122 significantly inhibited cell viability in Huh-7 by 70 % and in HepG2 by 60 %. By contrast, cell viability was not affected in five non-HCC cells. Thus, we provide a novel feasible strategy to improve the safety of miRNA-based therapeutic agent to cancer.

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