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Gene activation of CEBPA using saRNA: preclinical studies of the first in human saRNA drug candidate for liver cancer.

Authors :
Reebye V
Huang KW
Lin V
Jarvis S
Cutilas P
Dorman S
Ciriello S
Andrikakou P
Voutila J
Saetrom P
Mintz PJ
Reccia I
Rossi JJ
Huber H
Habib R
Kostomitsopoulos N
Blakey DC
Habib NA
Source :
Oncogene [Oncogene] 2018 Jun; Vol. 37 (24), pp. 3216-3228. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Mar 07.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Liver diseases are a growing epidemic worldwide. If unresolved, liver fibrosis develops and can lead to cirrhosis and clinical decompensation. Around 5% of cirrhotic liver diseased patients develop hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), which in its advanced stages has limited therapeutic options and negative survival outcomes. CEPBA is a master regulator of hepatic function where its expression is known to be suppressed in many forms of liver disease including HCC. Injection of MTL-CEBPA, a small activating RNA oligonucleotide therapy (CEBPA-51) formulated in liposomal nanoparticles (NOV340- SMARTICLES) upregulates hepatic CEBPA expression. Here we show how MTL-CEBPA therapy promotes disease reversal in rodent models of cirrhosis, fibrosis, hepatosteatosis, and significantly reduces tumor burden in cirrhotic HCC. Restoration of liver function markers were observed in a carbon-tetrachloride-induced rat model of fibrosis following 2 weeks of MTL-CEBPA therapy. At 14 weeks, animals showed reduction in ascites and enhanced survival rates. MTL-CEBPA reversed changes associated with hepatosteatosis in non-alcoholic methionine and cholic-deficient diet-induced steaotic liver disease. In diethylnitrosamine induced cirrhotic HCC rats, MTL-CEBPA treatment led to a significant reduction in tumor burden. The data included here and the rapid adoption of MTL-CEBPA into a Phase 1 study may lead to new therapeutic oligonucleotides for undruggable diseases.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-5594
Volume :
37
Issue :
24
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Oncogene
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29511346
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41388-018-0126-2