| Literature DB >> 28728419 |
Zhijiang Chen1,2,3, Meifang Zhai1,2,4, Xiangyang Xie5, Yue Zhang1,2,5, Siyu Ma1,2, Zhiping Li1,2, Fanglin Yu1,2, Baoquan Zhao1,2, Min Zhang1,2, Yang Yang1,2, Xingguo Mei1,2.
Abstract
An ideal brain-targeted nanocarrier must be sufficiently potent to penetrate the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and sufficiently competent to target the cells of interest with adequate optimized physiochemical features and biocompatibility. However, it is an enormous challenge to the researchers to organize the above-mentioned properties into a single nanocarrier particle. New frontiers in nanomedicine are advancing the research of new biomaterials. Herein, we demonstrate a straightforward strategy for brain targeting by encapsulating doxorubicin (DOX) into a naturally available and unmodified apoferritin nanocage (DOX-loaded APO). APO can specifically bind to cells expressing transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1). Because of the high expression of TfR1 in both brain endothelial and glioma cells, DOX-loaded APO can cross the BBB and deliver drugs to the glioma with TfR1. Subsequent research demonstrated that the DOX-loaded APO had good physicochemical properties (particle size of 12.03 ± 0.42 nm, drug encapsulation efficiency of 81.8 ± 1.1%) and significant penetrating and targeting effects in the coculture model of bEnd.3 and C6 cells in vitro. In vivo imaging revealed that DOX-loaded APO accumulated specifically in brain tumor tissues. Additionally, in vivo tumor therapy experiments (at a dosage of 1 mg/kg DOX) demonstrated that a longer survival period was observed in mice that had been treated with DOX-loaded APO (30 days) compared with mice receiving free DOX solution (19 days).Entities:
Keywords: apoferritin nanocage; blood−brain barrier; brain-targeted delivery; glioma
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28728419 DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.7b00341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Pharm ISSN: 1543-8384 Impact factor: 4.939