Since the failure of traditional therapy, gene therapy using functional DNA sequence and small RNA/DNA molecules (oligonucleotide) has become a promising avenue for cancer treatment. The discovery of RNA molecules has impelled researchers to investigate small regulatory RNA from various natural and artificial sources and determine a cogent target for controlling tumor progression. Small regulatory RNAs are used for therapeutic silencing of oncogenes and aberrant DNA repair response genes. Despite their advantages, therapies based on small RNAs exhibit limitations in terms of stability of therapeutic drugs, precision-based delivery in tissues, precision-based intercellular and intracellular targeting, and tumor heterogeneity-based responses. In this study, we summarize the potential and drawbacks of small RNAs in nucleic acid therapeutics for cancer.
Treating breast carcinoma gets tedious due to its invasive molecular subtypes and their various molecular genotypes. Depending upon genotype and phenotype of breast tumor types, they manipulate their survival arms in the form of DNA repair protein player including base excision repair (BER) pathway. Currently, avenues to treat breast cancer ate genotoxic drugs inflicting inter and intra-strand cross links, base modification and changes in the genome combined with inhibitors of BER pathway. This review summarizes the updated information on the relevance of BER response in breast carcinoma phenotypes and their potential therapeutic interference in the last decade.
Background:
In cancer therapeutics, several new classes of small molecules based targeted
drug options are reported including peptide mimetic and small RNAs therapeutics.
Objective:
Small RNAs represent a class of short non-coding endogenous RNAs that play an important
role in transcriptional and post transcriptional gene regulation among varied types of species
including plants and animals.
Methods:
To address the role of small RNAs from plant sources upon cancer cells, authors report on
the effects of small RNAs fraction of potato in in-vitro model of human derived HeLa cancer cells.
This paper reports the anti-proliferative and anti-survival effect of small RNAs fraction of
S. tuberosum L. (potato) tuber tissue. Here, authors employed small RNAs fractionation protocol,
cell viability, cell cytotoxicity MTT, PI stained cell cycle analysis and FITC-Annexin-V/PI stained
apoptosis assays.
Results:
In this paper, small RNAs fractions of potato clearly indicate 40-50% inhibition of HeLa
cell proliferation and viability. Interestingly, flow cytometer data point out appreciable increase from
7% to 14% of S-phase in HeLa cells by displaying the presence of an S-phase cell cycle arrest. Further,
arrest in S-phase of HeLa cells is also supported by an appreciable increase in total <2N plus
>4N DNA containing HeLa cells over 2N containing HeLa cells. For apoptotic assay, data suggest a
significant increase in apoptotic HeLa cells from (5%) control treated HeLa cells to (18%) small
RNAs treated HeLa cells.
Conclusion:
Taken together, findings suggest that small RNAs fractions of potato can induce Sphase
cell cycle arrest and these agents can act as an anti-proliferative agent in HeLa cells. This paper
proposes a huge scope for novel finding to dissect out the small RNAs target within HeLa cells
and other cancer cell types.
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