| Literature DB >> 32247202 |
Yu Yang1, Wenjun Zhu2, Liang Cheng2, Ren Cai3, Xuan Yi2, Jiaxuan He4, Xiaoshu Pan3, Lu Yang3, Kai Yang2, Zhuang Liu2, Weihong Tan5, Meiwan Chen6.
Abstract
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is an effective and noninvasive therapeutic strategy employing light-triggered singlet oxygen (SO) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) to kill lesional cells. However, for effective in vivo delivery of PDT agent into the cancer cells, various biological obstacles including blood circulation and condense extracellular matrix (ECM) in the tumor microenvironment (TME) need to be overcome. Furthermore, the enormous challenge in design of smart drug delivery systems is meeting the difference, even contradictory required functions, in different steps of the complicated delivery process. To this end, we present that TME-activatable circular pyrochlorophyll A (PA)-aptamer-PEG (PA-Apt-CHO-PEG) nanostructures, which combine the advantages of PEG and aptamer, would be able to realize efficient in vivo imaging and PDT. Upon intravenous (i.v.) injection, PA-Apt-CHO-PEG shows "stealth-like" long circulation in blood compartments without specific recognition capacity, but once inside solid tumor, PA-Apt-CHO-PEG nanostructures are cleaved and then form PA-Apt Aptamer-drug conjugations (ApDCs) in situ, allowing deep penetration into the solid tumor and specific recognition of cancer cells, both merits, considering anticipated future clinical translation of ApDCs.Entities:
Keywords: Aptamer-drug conjugates (ApDCs); Deep tumor penetration; Photodynamic therapy (PDT); Tumor microenvironment (TME)
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32247202 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.119971
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479