| Literature DB >> 30921731 |
Wangxiao He1, Jin Yan2, Lijuan Wang3, Bo Lei4, Peng Hou5, Wuyuan Lu6, Peter X Ma7.
Abstract
Nanostructures formed with bioactive peptides offer an exciting prospect in clinical oncology as a novel class of therapeutic agents for human cancers. Despite their therapeutic potential, however, peptide-based nanomedicines are often inefficacious in vivo due to low cargo-loading efficiency, poor tumor cell-targeting specificity and limited drug accumulation in tumor tissues. Here, we describe the design, via assembly of a p53-activating peptide termed PMI, functionalized PEG and fluorescent lanthanide oxyfluoride nanocrystals, of a novel nanotheranostic shaped in flexible rods. This lanthanide-peptide nanorod or LProd of bionic nature exhibited significantly enhanced tumor-targeting and -imaging properties compared to its spherical counterpart. Importantly, LProd potently inhibited tumor growth in a mouse model of human colon cancer through activating tumor suppressor protein p53 via MDM2/MDMX antagonism, while maintaining a highly favorable biosafety profile. Our data demonstrate that LProd as a multifunctional theranostic platform is ideally suited for tumor-specific peptide drug delivery with real-time disease tracking, thereby broadly impacting clinical development of antitumor peptides.Entities:
Keywords: Biomimetic nanomaterials; Peptide-based nanomedicines; Self-assembled theranostic; Tumor imaging; Tumor targeting
Year: 2019 PMID: 30921731 PMCID: PMC6628696 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.03.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479