| Literature DB >> 22506119 |
Abstract
Liposome-based chemotherapeutics used in the treatment of breast cancer can in principle enhance the therapeutic index of otherwise unencapsulated anticancer drugs. This is partially attributed to the fact that encapsulation of cytotoxic agents within liposomes allows for increased concentrations of the drug to be delivered to the tumor site. In addition, the presence of the phospholipid bilayer prevents the encapsulated active form of the drug from being broken down in the body prior to reaching tumor tissue and also serves to minimize exposure of the drug to healthy sensitive tissue. While clinically approved liposome-based chemotherapeutics such as Doxil have proven to be quite effective in the treatment of breast cancer, significant challenges remain involving poor drug transfer between the liposome and cancerous cells. In this review, we discuss the recent advancements made in the development of liposome-based chemotherapeutics with respect to improved drug transfer for use in breast cancer therapy.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22506119 PMCID: PMC3312267 DOI: 10.1155/2012/212965
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Deliv ISSN: 2090-3022
Figure 1Temperature-sensitive liposomes designed to remain stable while in circulation at 37°C and become significantly destabilized in the tumor microenvironment at slightly higher temperatures 39–42°C.
Figure 2Liposomes can accommodate both hydrophobic and hydrophilic drugs either in the phospholipid bilayer or in the internal aqueous core, respectively. They can be used in passive delivery of drugs or in active delivery in which targeting ligands are added. Targeting ligands are selected based on various upregulated cell-surface receptors present on cancer cells with respect to normal cells.
Recently reported targeted liposome-based chemotherapeutics to treat breast cancer. PE38KDEL from reference [26] is a 38 kDa mutant form of pseudomonas exotoxin A (PE), and the peptide sequence from reference [27] is DMPGTVLP.
| Cell-surface target | Targeting ligand | Encapsulated cargo | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| HER2 | Anti-HER2 Fab' | PE38KDEL | [ |
| Transferrin receptor | Antitransferrin receptor antibody | HER-2 siRNA | [ |
| MCF-7 cell specific | Peptide | PRDM14 siRNA | [ |
| Estrogen receptor | 17 | Anticancer gene | [ |
| Estrogen receptor | Estrone | Doxorubicin | [ |
| Lectins | Selectin ligand (SiaLeX) | Merphalan | [ |
Figure 3Both estradiol (a) and estrone (b) have previously been used as targeting ligands in liposome-based chemotherapeutics against breast cancer.
Figure 4Structure of the tetrasaccharide Sialyl Lewis X used in the carbohydrate vector (which includes a spacer and membrane anchor) to target lectins known to be overexpressed by mammalian malignant cells when compared to normal.