| Literature DB >> 28341549 |
Peng Guo1, Jiang Yang2, Diane R Bielenberg2, Deborah Dillon3, David Zurakowski4, Marsha A Moses2, Debra T Auguste5.
Abstract
Identifying a molecular target is essential for tumor-targeted nanomedicine. Current cancer nanomedicines commonly suffer from poor tumor specificity, "off-target" toxicity, and limited clinical efficacy. Here, we report a method to screen and identify new molecular targets for tumor-targeted nanomedicine based on a quantitative analysis. In our proof-of-principle study, we used comparative flow cytometric screening to identify ICAM-1 as a potential target for metastatic melanoma (MM). We further evaluated ICAM-1 as a MM targeting moiety by characterizing its (1) tumor specificity, (2) expression level, (3) cellular internalization, (4) therapeutic function, and (5) potential clinical impact. Quantitation of ICAM-1 protein expression on cells and validation by immunohistochemistry on human tissue specimens justified the synthesis of antibody-functionalized drug delivery vehicles, which were benchmarked against appropriate controls. We engineered ICAM-1 antibody conjugated, doxorubicin encapsulating immunoliposomes (ICAM-Dox-LPs) to selectively recognize and deliver doxorubicin to MM cells and simultaneously neutralize ICAM-1 signaling via an antibody blockade, demonstrating significant and simultaneous inhibitory effects on MM cell proliferation and migration. This paper describes a novel, quantitative metric system that identifies and evaluates new cancer targets for tumor-targeting nanomedicine.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer target; Drug delivery; ICAM-1; Immunoliposome; Metastatic melanoma; Nanomedicine
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28341549 PMCID: PMC5603366 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2017.03.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776