| Literature DB >> 29869524 |
He-Lin Xu1, Zi-Liang Fan1, De-Li ZhuGe1, Meng-Qi Tong1, Bi-Xin Shen1, Meng-Ting Lin1, Qun-Yan Zhu1, Bing-Hui Jin1, Yasin Sohawon2,3, Qing Yao1, Ying-Zheng Zhao1.
Abstract
Currently, combination drug therapy is one of the most effective approaches to glioma treatment. However, due to the inherent dissimilar pharmacokinetics of individual drugs and blood brain barriers, it was difficult for the concomitant drugs to simultaneously be delivered to glioma in an optimal dose ratio manner. Herein, a cationic micellar core (Cur-M) was first prepared from d-α-tocopherol-grafted-ε-polylysine polymer to encapsulate the hydrophobic curcumin, followed by dopamine-modified-poly-γ-glutamic acid polymer further deposited on its surface as a anion shell through pH-sensitive linkage to encapsulate the hydrophilic doxorubicin (DOX) hydrochloride. By controlling the combinational Cur/DOX molar ratio at 3:1, a pH-sensitive core-shell nanoparticle (PDCP-NP) was constructed to simultaneously target the cancer stem cells (CSCs) and the differentiated tumor cells. PDCP-NP exhibited a dynamic diameter of 160.8 nm and a zeta-potential of -30.5 mV, while its core-shell structure was further confirmed by XPS and TEM. The ratiometric delivery capability of PDCP-NP was confirmed by in vitro and in vivo studies, in comparison with the cocktail Cur/DOX solution. Meanwhile, the percentage of CSCs in tumors was significantly decreased from 4.16% to 0.95% after treatment with PDCP-NP. Overall, PDCP-NP may be a promising carrier for the combination therapy with drug candidates having dissimilar physicochemical properties.Entities:
Keywords: Ratiometric delivery; combination therapy; dissimilar pharmacokinetics; heterogeneity; targeting
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29869524 PMCID: PMC6060705 DOI: 10.1080/10717544.2018.1474974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv ISSN: 1071-7544 Impact factor: 6.419
Figure 1.Schematic diagram of pH-sensitive core–shell nanoparticles for ratiometric delivery of curcumin and doxorubicin.
Figure 2.(A) DLS and (B) TEM graphics of PDCP-NP in pH7.4 PBS of PDCP-NP, (C) the size/Zeta potential of PDCP and (D) the dose ratio of Cur/DOX in PDCP at different time interval during incubating with physiology-mimicking medium containing 10% FBS at 37 °C, and the cumulative release profiles of Cur (E) and DOX (F) from PDCP in pH7.4 PBS or pH 5.0 acetate buffer. Results are expressed as the mean ± SEM (n = 3).
Figure 3.In vitro cytotoxicity of Cur-VPDP, DOX-VPDP, or PDCP-NP against glioma spheroids-derived C6 cells at total drug concentrations of 0.4–6 μg/mL after 48 h (A) and 72 h (B), (C) CLSM images and flow cytometry (D) of glioma spheroids-derived C6 at 1 h, 4 h, and 8 h after treatment with the combinational Cur/DOX solution and PDCP-NP at Cur concentration of 1 μg/mL and DOX of 0.33 μg/mL, and the intracellular Cur and DOX concentrations of adherent (E) and spheroid-derived (F) cells were determined by HPLC after 8 h of incubation with various formulations. Data are shown as mean ± SD (n = 3), original magnification: 600×.
Figure 4.(A) Immunofluorescence cell staining and the (B) proportion of CD133 cells in C6 mammosphere cells after three days of treatment with different formulations. (C) The uptake of Cur/DOX solution and PDCP-NP with equivalent Cur concentration (2 μg/mL) by C6 tumor spheroids at 8 h. Original magnification: 200×.
Figure 5.(A) MRI images of the brains of glioma rats, (B) the calculated tumor volume, and (C) the survival curves of glioma-bearing rats after different treatments.
Figure 6.(A) Immunofluorescence tissue staining and (B) the CSCs proportion within tumors after the tumor suppression study. (C) TUNEL assays of C6 glioma sections from rats receiving different therapies on day 28. Nuclei were stained blue while extracellular matrix and cytoplasm were stained red in HE staining. In TUNEL analyses, blue: cell nuclei stained by DAPI. Green: apoptotic cells. Immunohistochemical assays of Ki67, CD31 in tumor tissue. Red arrows highlight the immunohistochemical characteristics. Original magnification: 200×.