Background: Advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) remains the most common cause of cancer death worldwide, due to its resistance to chemotherapy, aggressive growth and metastases. Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1) is a serine-threonine protein kinase which is overexpressed in many cancers, including NSCLC, and plays a major role in regulating tumour growth. The development of PLK1 chemical inhibitors for clinical use has been hindered by poor tumour bioavailability and/or off-target effects. Short-interfering-RNA (siRNA) holds promise as a new class of therapeutics which can selectively silence disease-causing genes. siRNA, however, cannot enter cells without a delivery vehicle.
Aims: To investigate the potential of non-viral, RNAi-interfering nanoparticles (iNOP-7) to deliver siRNA to NSCLC cells and silence PLK1 expression in vitro and in an orthotopic human NSCLC mouse model.
Results: PLK1 was highly expressed in multiple NSCLC cell lines when compared to normal human lung fibroblasts. iNOP-7 was non-toxic, and self-assembled with siRNA and delivered it with high efficiency to NSCLC cells. Furthermore, iNOP-7-PLK1 siRNA potently silenced PLK1 expression by up to 90% in five different NSCLC cell lines. iNOP-7-PLK1 siRNA also markedly reduced NSCLC growth as determined by Alamar Blue assays, and induced apoptosis, as evidenced by an increase in Annexin V, cleaved-caspase 3 and cleaved-PARP expression. Importantly, intravenous delivery of clinically-relevant doses of iNOP-7-PLK1 siRNA reduced lung tumour burden in SCIDbeige mice, measured as a 50% reduction in ex vivo bioluminescence (p=0.006). This result correlated with immunohistochemical staining, which showed reduced Ki67 expression in the tumours of iNOP-7-PLK1 siRNA treated mice.
Conclusion: Collectively, these data indicate that iNOP-7 can complex and deliver siRNA against PLK1 to NSCLC cells, resulting in decreased cell proliferation both in vitro and in vivo. Therefore, iNOP-7-PLK1 siRNA may provide a novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment of NSCLC and other cancers with aberrant PLK1 expression.