| Literature DB >> 29160717 |
Huige Peng1,2, Binfan Chen1,2, Wei Huang1, Yubo Tang1, Yifan Jiang1, Wenyuan Zhang1,2, Yongzhuo Huang1.
Abstract
Gefitinib is a first-line therapy in the EGFR-mutated nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, the development of drug resistance is almost unavoidable, thus leading to an unsustainable regimen. EGFRT790M mutation is the major cause responsible for the molecular-targeting therapy failure in NSCLC. Although the recently approved osimertinib is effective for the EGFRT790M-positive NSCLC, the osimertinib-resistant EGFR mutation is rapidly developed, too. In this study, we proposed a tumor-associated macrophage (TAM) reprogramming strategy for overcoming the EGFRT790M-associated drug resistance via a dual-targeting codelivery system of gefitinib/vorinostat that acted on both TAM with overexpression of mannose receptors and the HER-2 positive NSCLC cells. The trastuzumab-modified, mannosylated liposomal system was able to repolarize the protumor M2 phenotype to the antitumor M1 and cause the elevating ROS in the cancer cells, consequently modulating the intracellular redox balance via ROS/NOX3/MsrA axis. The suppressed MsrA facilitated the EGFRT790M degradation through 790M oxidation by ROS, thus resensitizing the EGFRT790M-positive cells to gefitinib. The dual-targeting codelivery and TAM-reprogramming strategies provided a potential method for rescuing the EGFRT790M-caused resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment.Entities:
Keywords: EGFRT790M; Tumor-associated macrophages; drug resistance; gefitinib; nonsmall cell lung cancer; vorinostat
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29160717 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b03756
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189