Investigator

Sangeeta N. Bhatia

Research Fellow · Imperial College London, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology

About

SNBSangeeta N. Bhatia
Papers(2)
Targeting and monitor…Synthetic Circuit-Dri…
Collaborators(8)
Sofia NeaherTimothy K. LuAva P. SoleimanyHeather E. FlemingLiangliang HaoLior NissimNatalie BoehnkeNour-Saïda Harzallah
Institutions(2)
Massachusetts Institu…University Of Minneso…

Papers

Targeting and monitoring ovarian cancer invasion with an RNAi and peptide delivery system

RNA interference (RNAi) therapeutics are an emerging class of medicines that selectively target mRNA transcripts to silence protein production and combat disease. Despite the recent progress, a generalizable approach for monitoring the efficacy of RNAi therapeutics without invasive biopsy remains a challenge. Here, we describe the development of a self-reporting, theranostic nanoparticle that delivers siRNA to silence a protein that drives cancer progression while also monitoring the functional activity of its downstream targets. Our therapeutic target is the transcription factor SMARCE1, which was previously identified as a key driver of invasion in early-stage breast cancer. Using a doxycycline-inducible shRNA knockdown in OVCAR8 ovarian cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo, we demonstrate that SMARCE1 is a master regulator of genes encoding proinvasive proteases in a model of human ovarian cancer. We additionally map the peptide cleavage profiles of SMARCE1-regulated proteases so as to design a readout for downstream enzymatic activity. To demonstrate the therapeutic and diagnostic potential of our approach, we engineered self-assembled layer-by-layer nanoparticles that can encapsulate nucleic acid cargo and be decorated with peptide substrates that release a urinary reporter upon exposure to SMARCE1-related proteases. In an orthotopic ovarian cancer xenograft model, theranostic nanoparticles were able to knockdown SMARCE1 which was in turn reported through a reduction in protease-activated urinary reporters. These LBL nanoparticles both silence gene products by delivering siRNA and noninvasively report on downstream target activity by delivering synthetic biomarkers to sites of disease, enabling dose-finding studies as well as longitudinal assessments of efficacy.

61Works
2Papers
8Collaborators

Positions

2024–

Research Fellow

Imperial College London · Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology

2022–

Infectious Disease Modeller

UK Health Security Agency

2022–

Consultant - COVID-19 Vaccine Evidence Assessment

World Health Organization · HQ/IVB Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals UHL

2017–

Research Assistant

Imperial College London · Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology

Education

2018

PhD

Western Sydney University · Centre for Research in Mathematics

Links & IDs
0000-0001-6525-101X

Scopus: 57200991566