Upholding hyaluronic acid’s multi-functionality for nucleic acid drug delivery to target EMT in breast cancer

Abstract

Synthetic nanoparticles can stably encapsulate nucleic acids as active pharmaceutical payloads. Recently, mRNA- and siRNA-based medicines have been successfully approved for preventing or treating infectious or orphan diseases. RNA interference is particularly relevant for cancer therapy, as tumors often involve up- or dys-regulated proteins that drive malignancy. This study aimed to develop a nanoparticulate delivery vehicle that targets EMT-phenotypic breast cancer cells, which lack effective treatment options. These “undruggable” tumors may be addressed by nanoparticles that target EMT-specific cell surface receptors. CD44, a transmembrane protein linked to cancer malignancy and EMT, was identified as a promising candidate. This work investigated the use of hyaluronic acid (HA) in HA-modified polyelectrolyte complexes (polyplexes, Px) for its dual roles as a targeting ligand and a stabilizing stealth-molecule. Various strategies for non-covalently immobilizing HA on the particle surfaces were tested. HAPx nanoparticles demonstrated HA:PEI-ratio dependent stability against competing anionic biomolecules, improved colloidal stability in protein-rich environments mimicking in vivo conditions, and enhanced selectivity and efficacy in targeting E/M-hybrids and EMT-positive cells via CD44-HA mediated endocytosis. Finally, our results indicate different internalization kinetics and efficiencies between CD44v and CD44s isotypes, highlighting the need to consider CD44 heterogeneities in the clinical development of HA-based drug delivery systems.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Feb 2025
Accepted
02 Jun 2025
First published
04 Jun 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale, 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Upholding hyaluronic acid’s multi-functionality for nucleic acid drug delivery to target EMT in breast cancer

L. Isert, I. Gialdini, T. M. H. Ngo, G. Loiudice, D. C. Lamb and O. M. Merkel, Nanoscale, 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5NR00808E

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