| Literature DB >> 32067020 |
Yemei Dai1, Zelei Jiang1, Jingyi Li1, Mengfan Wang2, Chang Liu3, Wei Qi4, Rongxin Su4, Zhimin He1.
Abstract
The effective uptake and release of hydrophobic antitumor drugs in cancer cells is a practical challenge for tumor chemotherapy. Many methods were developed to conquer it through modifying drug molecules with hydrophilic groups, or fabricating nanodrugs based on hydrophilic materials. In recent years, peptides have attracted significant interest as part of a promising platform for fabricating nanodrugs due to their low cytotoxicity, favorable variability and self-assembly property. In this study, a cystine bridged peptide (CBP) was designed to co-assemble with a hydrophobic antitumor drug curcumin (CCM), to form a tumor-responsive nanodrug. The hydrophilicity of the peptide promotes the water-dispersity of nanodrugs, and the disulfide bond in cystine, which is cleavable by glutathione (GSH), was involved considering the overexpressed GSH in tumor microenvironments. In vitro and in vivo tests on cervical cancer cells revealed that the obtained nanodrug can rapidly dissociate at tumor sites and inhibit the tumor growth with limited side effects on healthy tissues.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32067020 DOI: 10.1039/c9tb02625h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Chem B ISSN: 2050-750X Impact factor: 6.331