| Literature DB >> 27416332 |
Saurav J Sarma1, Aslam A Khan1, Lalit N Goswami1, Satish S Jalisatgi1, M Frederick Hawthorne2.
Abstract
The construction and application of a unique monodisperse closomer drug-delivery system (CDDS) integrating three different functionalities onto an icosahedral closo-dodecaborane [B12 ](2-) scaffold is described. Eleven B-OH vertices of [closo-B12 (OH)12 ](2-) were used to attach eleven copies of the anticancer drug chlorambucil and the targeting vector glucosamine through a bifurcating lysine linker. The remaining twelfth vertex was used to attach a fluorescent imaging probe. The presence of multiple glucosamine units offered a monodisperse and highly water-soluble CDDS with a high payload of therapeutic cargo. This array enhanced the penetration of the drug into cancer cells by exploiting the overexpression of GLUT-1 receptors present on cancer cells. About 15-fold enhancement in cytotoxicity was observed for CDDS-1 against Jurkat cells, compared to CDDS-2, which lacks the GLUT-1 targeting glucosamine. A cytotoxicity comparison of CDDS-1 against colorectal RKO cells and its GLUT-1 knock-out version confirmed that GLUT-1 mediates endocytosis. Using fluorescent markers both CDDS-1 and -2 were traced to the mitochondria, a novel target for alkylating agents.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; chlorambucil; closomer; drug delivery; glycoconjugates
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27416332 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201602413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236