| Literature DB >> 31374479 |
Prakash Lingasamy1, Allan Tobi1, Maarja Haugas1, Hedi Hunt1, Päärn Paiste2, Toomas Asser3, Tõnu Rätsep3, Venkata Ramana Kotamraju4, Rolf Bjerkvig5, Tambet Teesalu6.
Abstract
Oncofetal fibronectin (FN-EDB) and tenascin-C C domain (TNC-C) are nearly absent in extracellular matrix of normal adult tissues but upregulated in malignant tissues. Both FN-EDB and TNC-C are developed as targets of antibody-based therapies. Here we used peptide phage biopanning to identify a novel targeting peptide (PL1, sequence: PPRRGLIKLKTS) that interacts with both FN-EDB and TNC-C. Systemic PL1-functionalized model nanoscale payloads [iron oxide nanoworms (NWs) and metallic silver nanoparticles] homed to glioblastoma (GBM) and prostate carcinoma xenografts, and to non-malignant angiogenic neovessels induced by VEGF-overexpression. Antibody blockage experiments demonstrated that PL1 tumor homing involved interactions with both receptor proteins. Treatment of GBM mice with PL1-targeted model therapeutic nanocarrier (NWs loaded with a proapoptotic peptide) resulted in reduced tumor growth and increased survival, whereas treatment with untargeted particles had no effect. PL1 peptide may have applications as an affinity ligand for delivery of diagnostic and therapeutic compounds to microenvironment of solid tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Affinity targeting; Extracellular matrix; GBM; Homing peptide; Magnetic resonance imaging; Nanomedicine; Prostate carcinoma; T7 phage display
Year: 2019 PMID: 31374479 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.119373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479