| Literature DB >> 27443981 |
József Murányi1,2, Pál Gyulavári1, Attila Varga1, Györgyi Bökönyi1, Henriette Tanai1, Tibor Vántus2, Domonkos Pap3, Krisztina Ludányi4, Gábor Mező5, György Kéri1,2.
Abstract
Targeted tumour therapy is the focus of recent cancer research. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogues are able to deliver anticancer agents selectively into tumour cells, which highly express GnRH receptors. However, the effectiveness of different analogues as targeting moiety in drug delivery systems is rarely compared, and the investigated types of cancer are also limited. Therefore, we prepared selectively labelled, fluorescent derivatives of GnRH-I, -II and -III analogues, which were successfully used for drug targeting. In this manuscript, we investigated these analogues' solubility, stability and passive membrane permeability and compared their cellular uptake by various cancer cells. We found that these labelled GnRH conjugates provide great detectability, without undesired cytotoxicity and passive membrane permeability. The introduced experiments with these conjugates proved their reliable tracking, quantification and comparison. Cellular uptake efficiency was studied on human breast, colon, pancreas and prostate cancer cells (MCF-7, HT-29, BxPC-3, LNCaP) and on dog kidney cells (Madin-Darby canine kidney). Each of the three conjugates was taken up by GnRH-I receptor-expressing cells, but the different cells preferred different analogues. Furthermore, we demonstrated for the first time the high cell surface expression of GnRH-I receptors and the effective cellular uptake of GnRH analogues on human pharynx tumour (Detroit-562) cells. In summary, our presented results detail that the introduced conjugates could be innovative tools for the examination of the GnRH-based drug delivery systems on various cells and offer novel information about these peptides.Entities:
Keywords: Detroit-562; FITC; GnRH; LHRH; conjugate; pharynx tumour; targeted therapy
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27443981 DOI: 10.1002/psc.2904
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pept Sci ISSN: 1075-2617 Impact factor: 1.905