Discovery of tumoricidal DNA oligonucleotides by response-directed in vitro evolution

Drug discovery is challenged by ineffectiveness of drugs against variable and evolving diseases, and adverse effects due to poor selectivity. We describe a robust platform which potentially addresses these limitations. The platform enables rapid discovery of DNA oligonucleotides evolved in vitro for...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications biology 2020-01, Vol.3 (1), p.29-29, Article 29
Hauptverfasser: Mamet, Noam, Amir, Yaniv, Lavi, Erez, Bassali, Liron, Harari, Gil, Rusinek, Itai, Skalka, Nir, Debby, Elinor, Greenberg, Mor, Zamir, Adva, Paz, Anastasia, Reiss, Neria, Loewenthal, Gil, Avivi, Irit, Shimoni, Avichai, Neev, Guy, Abu-Horowitz, Almogit, Bachelet, Ido
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Drug discovery is challenged by ineffectiveness of drugs against variable and evolving diseases, and adverse effects due to poor selectivity. We describe a robust platform which potentially addresses these limitations. The platform enables rapid discovery of DNA oligonucleotides evolved in vitro for exerting specific and selective biological responses in target cells. The process operates without a priori target knowledge (mutations, biomarkers, etc). We report the discovery of oligonucleotides with direct, selective cytotoxicity towards cell lines, as well as patient-derived solid and hematological tumors. A specific oligonucleotide termed E8, induced selective apoptosis in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells. Polyethylene glycol-modified E8 exhibited favorable biodistribution in animals, persisting in tumors up to 48-hours after injection. E8 inhibited tumors by 50% within 10 days of treatment in patient-derived xenograft mice, and was effective in ex vivo organ cultures from chemotherapy-resistant TNBC patients. These findings highlight a drug discovery model which is target-tailored and on-demand. Noam Mamet et al. describe a platform for rapid de novo discovery of DNA oligonucleotides that directly and selectively induce apoptosis in cancer cells. They report target-tailored discovery of tumoricidal oligonucleotides against tumor cell lines as well as patient-derived tumors.
ISSN:2399-3642
2399-3642
DOI:10.1038/s42003-020-0756-0