| Literature DB >> 32627387 |
Yongfei Li1, Mie Chen2, Bowen Yao3, Xun Lu4, Boyang Song1, Shauna N Vasilatos5, Xiang Zhang6, Xiaomei Ren1, Chang Yao1, Weihe Bian1, Lizhu Sun6.
Abstract
Poor deep tumor penetration and incomplete intracellular drug release remain challenges for antitumor nanomedicine application in clinical settings. Herein, a nanomedicine (RLPA-NPs) is developed that can achieve prolonged blood circulation, deep tumor penetration, active-targeting of cancer cells, endosome/lysosome escape, and intracellular selectivity self-amplified drug release for effective drug delivery. The RLPA-NPs are constructed by encapsulation of a pH-sensitive polymer octadecylamine-poly(aspartate-1-(3-aminopropyl) imidazole) (OA-P(Asp-API)) and a ROS-generation agent, β-Lapachone (Lap), in micelles assembled by the tumor-penetration peptide internalizing RGD (iRGD)-modified ROS-responsive paclitaxel (PTX)-prodrug. iRGD could promote RLPA-NPs penetration into deep tumor tissue, and specific targeting to cancer cells. After internalization by cancer cells through receptor-mediated endocytosis, OA-P(Asp-API) can rapidly protonate in the endosome's acidic environment, resulting in RLPA-NPs escape from the endosome through the "proton sponge effect". At the same time, the RLPA-NPs micelle disassembles, releasing Lap and PTX-prodrug. Subsequently, the released Lap could generate ROS, consequently amplifying and accelerating PTX release to kill tumor cells. The in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated that RLPA-NPs can significantly improve the therapeutic effect compared to control groups. Therefore, RLPA-NPs are a promising nanoplatform for overcoming multiple physiological and pathological barriers to enhance drug delivery.Entities:
Keywords: deep tumor penetration; lysosome escape; pH/ROS-cascade responsive; proton sponge effect; self-amplified drug release
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32627387 DOI: 10.1002/smll.202002188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281