Sequence-and target-independent angiogenesis suppression by siRNA via TLR3

ME Kleinman, K Yamada, A Takeda… - Nature, 2008 - nature.com
ME Kleinman, K Yamada, A Takeda, V Chandrasekaran, M Nozaki, JZ Baffi…
Nature, 2008nature.com
Clinical trials of small interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting vascular endothelial growth factor-A
(VEGFA) or its receptor VEGFR1 (also called FLT1), in patients with blinding choroidal
neovascularization (CNV) from age-related macular degeneration, are premised on gene
silencing by means of intracellular RNA interference (RNAi). We show instead that CNV
inhibition is a siRNA-class effect: 21-nucleotide or longer siRNAs targeting non-mammalian
genes, non-expressed genes, non-genomic sequences, pro-and anti-angiogenic genes …
Abstract
Clinical trials of small interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGFA) or its receptor VEGFR1 (also called FLT1), in patients with blinding choroidal neovascularization (CNV) from age-related macular degeneration, are premised on gene silencing by means of intracellular RNA interference (RNAi). We show instead that CNV inhibition is a siRNA-class effect: 21-nucleotide or longer siRNAs targeting non-mammalian genes, non-expressed genes, non-genomic sequences, pro- and anti-angiogenic genes, and RNAi-incompetent siRNAs all suppressed CNV in mice comparably to siRNAs targeting Vegfa or Vegfr1 without off-target RNAi or interferon-α/β activation. Non-targeted (against non-mammalian genes) and targeted (against Vegfa or Vegfr1) siRNA suppressed CNV via cell-surface toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3), its adaptor TRIF, and induction of interferon-γ and interleukin-12. Non-targeted siRNA suppressed dermal neovascularization in mice as effectively as Vegfa siRNA. siRNA-induced inhibition of neovascularization required a minimum length of 21 nucleotides, a bridging necessity in a modelled 2:1 TLR3–RNA complex. Choroidal endothelial cells from people expressing the TLR3 coding variant 412FF were refractory to extracellular siRNA-induced cytotoxicity, facilitating individualized pharmacogenetic therapy. Multiple human endothelial cell types expressed surface TLR3, indicating that generic siRNAs might treat angiogenic disorders that affect 8% of the world’s population, and that siRNAs might induce unanticipated vascular or immune effects.
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