| Literature DB >> 31778740 |
Chunhui Liang1, Xiaorong Yan2, Renshu Zhang3, Tengyan Xu1, Debing Zheng1, Zhaoqi Tan1, Yaoxia Chen1, Zhengfeng Gao2, Ling Wang2, Xingyi Li3, Zhimou Yang4.
Abstract
Subcellular delivery of nanomedicines has emerged as a promising approach to enhance the therapeutic efficacy of anticancer drugs. Nuclear accumulation of anticancer drugs are essential for its therapeutic efficacy because their targets are generally located within the nucleus. However, strategies for the nuclear accumulation of nanomedicines with anticancer drugs rarely reported. In this study, we reported a promising nanomedicine, comprising a drug-peptide amphiphile, with enhanced cellular uptake and nuclear accumulation capability for cancer therapy. The drug-peptide amphiphile consisted of the peptide ligand PMI (TSFAEYWNLLSP), which was capable of activating the p53 gene by binding with the MDM2 and MDMX located in the cell nucleus. Peptide conformations could be finely tuned by using different strategies including heating-cooling and enzyme-instructed self-assembly (EISA) to trigger molecular self-assembly at different temperatures. Due to the different peptide conformations, the drug-peptide amphiphile self-assembled into nanomedicines with various properties, including stabilities, cellular uptake, and nuclear accumulation. The optimized nanomedicine formed by EISA strategy at a low temperature of 4 °C showed enhanced cellular uptake and nuclear accumulation capability, and thus exhibited superior anticancer ability both in vitro and in vivo. Overall, our study provides a useful strategy for finely tuning the properties and activities of peptide-based supramolecular nanomaterials, which may lead to optimized nanomedicines with enhanced performance.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-cancer; Enzyme; Nuclear accumulation; Peptide; Self-assembly
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31778740 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2019.11.028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776