| Literature DB >> 26299192 |
Wei Fan1,2, Xiang Wang3, Baoyue Ding4, Haimin Cai2, Xudong Wang2, Yueqi Fan2, Yong Li1, Shenghui Liu1, Suifeng Nie2, Qiping Lu1.
Abstract
The high transfection efficiency and enhanced therapeutic effect of drug delivery systems developed in recent years imply that ligand-decorated nanocarriers are potentially targeted vectors for breast cancer treatment. Thioaptamer (TA)-modified nanoparticles (NPs) designed in this study mainly consisted of ligand TA and dendritic polyamidoamine (PAMAM). Knowing that TA can bind to CD44-receptors in breast cancer, this study was intended to validate the safety and feasibility of systemic miRNA delivery to breast cancer cells by TA-PEG-PAMAM/miRNA (polyethylene glycol - PEG), testify its tumor targeting efficiency in vitro, and observe its biodistribution when it was administered systemically to a xenograft mouse model of breast cancer. The in vivo and ex vivo imaging results in human breast cancer tumor-bearing mice showed that TA-modification was able to enhance the accumulation of NPs in the breast cancer tumor. Our data showed that TA-NPs did not induce functional impairment to normal tissues and vital organs. TA-NPs may prove to be a safe and effective miRNA deliver system for breast cancer treatment, and could be widely used in pre-clinical and eventually clinical arenas of breast cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; CD44; microRNA; targeted delivery; thioaptamer
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26299192 DOI: 10.3109/1061186X.2015.1077850
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Target ISSN: 1026-7158 Impact factor: 5.121