| Literature DB >> 27519301 |
Simona Mura1, Eric Buchy2, Gizem Askin3, Fanny Cayre2, Julie Mougin2, Sandrine Gouazou2, Dunja Sobot2, Sabrina Valetti4, Barbara Stella5, Didier Desmaele2, Patrick Couvreur6.
Abstract
Combined therapy with gemcitabine and tyrosine-kinase inhibitors (i.e., sunitinib) has already demonstrated important benefits in pancreatic cancer treatment. Further therapeutic advantage could be achieved by their co-loading in a single nanoscale system, which enables (i) the co-existence of drugs with different mechanisms of action and pharmacokinetic profiles and (ii) the fine tuning of their release rate overcoming the rapid clearance often observed with free drugs. In this context, the already validated squalenoylation approach has been applied to the design of a multidrug nanoparticle (NP) made by co-self-assembly of the squalene-based prodrugs of gemcitabine (SQGem) and sunitinib (SQSun). We hypothesized that co-delivering of SQGem and SQSun in a single nanoparticle was capable to increase their cytotoxicity on MIA PaCa-2 pancreatic cancer cells compared to the monodrug NPs. Nevertheless, multidrug NPs (i.e., SQGem/SQSun NPs) were as efficient as the physical mixture of the individual monodrug NPs (SQGem NPs + SQSun NPs) thus suggesting that the cytotoxicity raised from the exposure of the cells simultaneously to the two bioconjugates rather than to their original loading into a single or two different nanoparticles. To be noted that the lack of differences in static 2D cultures does not exclude a different behavior in dynamic conditions in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: Combined therapy; Gemcitabine; Nanoparticles; Pancreatic cancer; Sunitinib
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27519301 DOI: 10.1016/j.biochi.2016.08.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochimie ISSN: 0300-9084 Impact factor: 4.079