mp500745v_si_001.pdf (4.22 MB)
Download fileInhalable Dry Powder Formulations of siRNA and pH-Responsive Peptides with Antiviral Activity Against H1N1 Influenza Virus
journal contribution
posted on 2015-03-02, 00:00 authored by Wanling Liang, Michael
Y. T. Chow, Pui Ngan Lau, Qi Tony Zhou, Philip C. L. Kwok, George P. H. Leung, A. James Mason, Hak-Kim Chan, Leo L. M. Poon, Jenny K. W. LamPulmonary
delivery of siRNA has considerable therapeutic potential
for treating viral respiratory infectious diseases including influenza.
By introducing siRNA that targets the conserved region of viral genes
encoding nucleocapsid protein (NP), viral mRNAs can be degraded and
viral replication can be inhibited in mammalian cells. To enable siRNA
to be used as an antiviral agent, the nucleic acid delivery barrier
must be overcome. Effective local delivery of siRNA to lung tissues
is required to reduce the therapeutic dose and minimize systemic adverse
effects. To develop a formulation suited for clinical application,
complexes of pH-responsive peptides, containing either histidine or
2,3-diaminopropionic acid (Dap), and siRNA were prepared into dry
powders by spray drying with mannitol, which was used as a bulking
agent. The spray-dried (SD) powders were characterized and found to
be suitable for inhalation with good stability, preserving the integrity
of the siRNA as well as the biological and antiviral activities. The
formulations mediated highly effective in vitro delivery
of antiviral siRNA into mammalian lung epithelial cells, leading to
significant inhibition of viral replication when the transfected cells
were subsequently challenged with H1N1 influenza virus. SD siRNA powders
containing pH-responsive peptides are a promising inhalable formulation
to deliver antiviral siRNA against influenza and are readily adapted
for the treatment of other respiratory diseases.