| Literature DB >> 25806671 |
Junsung Lee1, Jiyoung Kim1, Moonkyoung Jeong1, Hyoungjin Lee1, Unbyeol Goh1, Hyaeyeong Kim1, Byungji Kim1, Ji-Ho Park1.
Abstract
Natural membrane vesicles (MVs) derived from various types of cells play an essential role in transporting biological materials between cells. Here, we show that exogenous compounds are packaged in the MVs by engineering the parental cells via liposomes, and the MVs mediate autonomous intercellular migration of the compounds through multiple cancer cell layers. Hydrophobic compounds delivered selectively to the plasma membrane of cancer cells using synthetic membrane fusogenic liposomes were efficiently incorporated into the membrane of MVs secreted from the cells and then transferred to neighboring cells via the MVs. This liposome-mediated MV engineering strategy allowed hydrophobic photosensitizers to significantly penetrate both spheroids and in vivo tumors, thereby enhancing the therapeutic efficacy. These results suggest that innate biological transport systems can be in situ engineered via synthetic liposomes to guide the penetration of chemotherapeutics across challenging tissue barriers in solid tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Liposome; membrane vesicle; nanomedicine; photosensitizer; spheroid
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25806671 DOI: 10.1021/nl5047494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189