Abstract

Multiple myeloma is a refractory cancer of plasma cells. Although treatment strategies for multiple myeloma are getting improved year by year, in most cases patients relapse due to the emergence of drug-resistant mutations in the myeloma cells. The interplay between myeloma cells and tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) is important for the pathology. We thought that some heptamer-type sgRNAs for TRUE gene silencing would be able to transform TAM toward the M1 state and might become therapeutic drugs for myeloma. Here, we searched for heptamer-type sgRNAs that can shift macrophages toward the M1 state. We screened a heptamer-type sgRNA library for the ability to up-regulate IL-12b gene expression in human macrophage-like cell lines, and found three such sgRNAs. One of the sgRNAs, H12960, which also showed such ability in human fresh macrophages and mouse macrophage-like cell lines, efficiently suppressed human myeloma cell growth in SCID/NOD mice.

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