Abstract

Therapy resistance associated with relapse is a main cause of death in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). To address this issue, a dual-targeting CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing nanosystem was constructed for CXCR4 knockout to reverse the malignancy of leukemia cells. The surface of the dual-targeting nanosystem is composed of MUC1 specific aptamer incorporated alginate (MUC1 aptamer-alginate) and T22-NLS peptide with T22 sequence targeting CXCR4; the core of the nanosystem consists of protamine complexed with CRISPR-Cas9 plasmid. The in vitro study shows that the nanosystem mediated genome editing induces cell apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, as well as inhibited cell migration and adhesion in edited THP-1 cells after CXCR4 knockout. Further, the unprocessed peripheral blood from acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients was directly used to carry out ex vivo study. The results show the genome editing nanosystem can effectively knock out CXCR4 in leukemia cells, leading to attenuated CXCR4 protein as studied by antibody labeling and reduced CXCR4 mRNA as probed by a molecular beacon delivery system. In addition to developing a promising delivery vector for gene therapy on AML, this study also provides an effective strategy to evaluate the therapeutic efficiency of particular treatments by peripheral blood-based ex vivo studies.

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