| Literature DB >> 19865518 |
Kyung Taek Oh1, Hye Jung Baik2, A Hyeong Lee2, Young Taik Oh3, Yu Seok Youn4, Eun Seong Lee2.
Abstract
Medical applications of nanoparticular systems have attracted considerable attention because of their potential use in therapeutic targeting of disease tissues and their lower level of toxicity against healthy tissue, relative to traditional pharmaceutical drugs. The use of nanoparticular systems has been shown to overcome the limitations of most anticancer drugs in clinical applications. In particular, the improved performance of smarted nanoparticular system for solving the drug resistance problems that typically interrupt tumor treatment has provided a promising strategy for successful tumor chemotherapy. This review highlights recent studies that have examined the therapeutic effect of nanoparticular systems on drug-resistant tumors and presents insight on how they work.Entities:
Keywords: drug delivery system; multi-drug resistance; nanoparticle; tumor treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19865518 PMCID: PMC2769153 DOI: 10.3390/ijms10093776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1.Drug-resistance mechanisms (such as P-gp, MRP, BCRP, LRP, p53, bcl-2, and TopoII) in tumor cells. See text for details.
Figure 2.Drug-resistance mechanisms (such as soluble growth factors, ECM-based drug resistance, cell-cell interaction, and hypoxia-induced drug resistance) in the tumor microenvironment. See text for details.
Reversal of drug-resistance by nanoparticular systems.
| Pluronic® micelle with ultrasound treatment | Enhancing drug uptake by ultrasound treatment | Possible to treat wild and drug-resistant tumors | [ |
| Paclitaxel loaded mixed micelle system of Pluronic® P105 and L101 | Inhibition of P-gp by Pluronic® | Combined mechanisms of FR-mediated endocytosis for tumor targeting | [ |
| Liposomal formulation with doxorubicin/paclitaxel/valspodar | Inhibition of P-gp by valspodar | - | [ |
| Liposomal topotecan with amlodipine | Inhibition of P-gp by amlodipine | - | [ |
| Liposomal doxorubicin/verapamil | Inhibition of P-gp by verapamil | Verapamil affected pharmacokinetics of doxorubicin | [ |
| Liposomal doxorubicin/Pluronic® F68 | Inhibition of P-gp by Pluronic® | - | [ |
| Liposomal doxorubicin/antisense oligonucleotides | Targeted to | Overcoming | [ |
| Polyalkylcyanoacrylate nanoparticles with doxorubicin and cyclosporin A | Enhancing drug uptake by unknown mechanisms of polyalkylcyanoacrylate nanoparticles | Cyclosporin A can affect pharmacokinetics of doxorubicin | [ |
| Daunorubicin loaded Fe3O4 nanoparticles | Enhancing drug uptake by Fe3O4 nanoparticles | Interaction between Fe3O4 and unknown biological active molecules on the membrane of leukemia cells, increased drug uptake | [ |
| Poly(ethylene oxide)-modified poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PEO-PCL) nanoparticle with ceramide and paclitaxel | Targeting to P-gp | Co-therapy (ceramide and paclitaxel) enhanced cytotoxicity for drug-resistant tumors | [ |
| Transferrin receptor-targeting liposomal doxorubicin | Evading P-gp function by transferring receptor-mediated internalization pathway | - | [ |
| Folate-conjugated liposomal doxorubicin | Evading P-gp function by FR-mediated internalization pathway | No significant tumor-growth inhibition effect in | [ |
| pH-sensitive poly( | Enhancing cytoplasmic drug release due to proton-sponge effect of poly( | [ |
Figure 3.Schematic representation of the acid-induced pop-up targeting mechanism (PHSMpop-upTAT) of the peptide-conjugated micelle corona. See text for details. Reproduced with permission from reference [73].
IC50 of PHSMpop-upTAT and free DOX for human promyelocytic leukemia drug-resistant HL-60/MX2 (with decreased TopoII level), human promyelocytic leukemia HL-60 (with bcl-2), human lung drug-resistant NCI-H69/AR (with MRP), and human ovarian tumor A549 (with LRP) cells (n=9). All experiments were performed at pH 6.8 RPMI-1640/PBS medium. IC50 was obtained from the DOX concentration where 50% cell viability was achieved. Reproduced with permission from reference [73].
| 0.32 ± 0.07 μg/mL | 1.12 ± 0.08 μg/mL | |
| 0.10 ± 0.03 μg/mL | 0.42 ± 0.07 μg/mL | |
| 0.20 ± 0.06 μg/mL | 0.75 ± 0.08 μg/mL | |
| 0.75 ± 0.08 μg/mL | 6.60 ± 0.09 μg/mL |
IC50 after 1-hour incubation with DOX-loaded formulation;
IC50 after 1-hour incubation with DOX-loaded formulation;
IC50 after 24-hour incubation with DOX-loaded formulation;
IC50 after 48-hour incubation with DOX-loaded formulation.
Figure 4.Schematic presentation of the virogels. See text for details. Reproduced with permission from reference [76].