MicroRNA Therapeutics: Towards a New Era for the Management of Cancer
A special issue of Cancers (ISSN 2072-6694). This special issue belongs to the section "Cancer Therapy".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2021) | Viewed by 71613
Special Issue Editor
Interests: non-coding RNAs; microRNAs; tissue-slide-based microRNA biomarkers; animal models; genetic engineering; nanoparticle delivery; breast cancer; pancreatic cancer
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The first microRNA, lin-4, was discovered in the small roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans over 25 years ago. It took seven years for the discovery of the second microRNA, let-7a, also in C. elegans in 2000, but soon after that the evolutionary conservation of let-7a and shared enzymatic machinery between short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and microRNAs tremendously contributed to accelerating the pace of research on these short, non-coding regulatory RNAs. The field of microRNA cancer research is one that emerged very early on and at a frenetic pace with a number of major scientific discoveries in very short succession, and with the almost immediate realization of the great potential of microRNA-based therapies to replenish the activity of a tumor-suppressing, and/or inhibit the activity of a tumor-promoting, microRNA. Within the last decade, several microRNAs have been positioned as front-runners for microRNA-based therapy in different cancer types, and several compounds from different companies have already entered clinical trials. However, most microRNA-based therapeutics are still in the pre-clinical stage. FDA approval of the first-ever siRNA-based therapy, Onpattro, in August 2018 has provided an immense boost to the development and implementation of additional microRNA-based therapeutics, which face similar challenges for stability and targeted delivery as siRNA-based therapies do.
This Special Issue focuses on microRNA-based viral and non-viral delivery strategies in animal models and first-in-human clinical trials towards a new era in cancer management. Viral strategies will include recent advances in packaging, tissue tropism, and immunogenicity of adeno-associated viruses, lentiviruses, and other viral systems. Non-viral strategies will include recent advances in packaging technologies using native and synthetic exosomes, liposomal encapsulation, and nanoparticle conjugation as well as new RNA formulations and modifications for increased stability and/or image-guided monitoring.
Dr. Sempere Lorenzo
Guest Editor
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