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From resistance to resilience: Reprogramming drug resistant signals with artificial gene circuit device to overcome tumour chemotherapy challenges

15 Dec 2023
From resistance to resilience: Reprogramming drug resistant signals with artificial gene circuit device to overcome tumour chemotherapy challenges

This study is led by Dr. Weiren Huang (Shenzhen Institute of Translational Medicine, the First Affiliated Hospital of Shenzhen University). In clinical practice, drug resistance poses a significant challenge in cancer treatment. The process of developing resistance is regulated by complex decision-making pathways and genetic signal networks. The cross-redundancy and compensatory mechanisms between different pathways limit the effectiveness of interventions against drug resistance.

This study has shed light on this challenge, particularly in the context of bladder cancer treatment. The researchers discovered that after receiving the chemotherapy drug vincristine, bladder cancer cells experienced significant activation of a key nuclear transcription factor known as NF-κB. This activation, in turn, led to an upregulation of the drug-resistance gene OIP5, rendering the cancer cells less responsive to vincristine.

The team developed an engineered artificial gene circuit device to modulate the process of drug resistance. This device remains inactive when tumour cells have not yet produced a drug resistance signal (activation of NF-κB). However, once the NF-κB is activated, the device automatically switches to an active state, promptly initiating intervention in downstream OIP5. “This device helps to automatically monitor and intervene when drug resistance signals appear during chemotherapy. It ensures that resistance doesn't develop right from the start, leading to an effective treatment with no occurrence of drug resistance”, Huang says.

By utilizing the artificial NF-κB/OIP5 gene circuit device, a new connection can be established between drug resistance signals and effector genes in the process of tumour response to chemotherapy. When vincristine activates NF-κB, the artificial gene circuit device initiates the downregulation of downstream drug-resistant gene OIP5 by binding to NF-κB, reversing the upregulation effect of NF-κB on OIP5. Simultaneously, their competitive binding also blocks the activation of other NF-κB-mediated drug resistance pathways, including anti-apoptosis and drug metabolism pathways. This dual intervention successfully transforms the original drug resistance signal of NF-κB into a signal that inhibits resistance. By utilizing NF-κB as an indicator signal for drug resistance, this strategy enables timely intervention in tumour drug resistance, ultimately improving the anti-tumour efficacy of vincristine.

To allow the artificial gene circuit devices to better enhance the anti-cancer efficacy of vincristine, researchers further developed cationized albumin nanoparticles to co-deliver both to tumour cells. In all the treatment experiments tested, including vincristine-resistant cell lines, human-derived tumour organoids, and mouse models, the artificial NF-κB/OIP5 gene circuit device proved to significantly reduce bladder cancer resistance to vincristine. Considering that the NF-κB/OIP5 pathway is not the sole factor influencing tumour resistance, the research team plans to further test additional resistance signals and drugs to validate the universality of this combination therapy strategy.

Source: Science China Press