| Literature DB >> 33268987 |
Xiaowei Wang1, Yuhan Qiu1, Mengyan Wang1, Conghui Zhang1, Tianshu Zhang1, Huimin Zhou1, Wenxia Zhao1, Wuli Zhao1, Guimin Xia1, Rongguang Shao1.
Abstract
Nanomedicines (NMs) have played an increasing role in cancer therapy as carriers to efficiently deliver therapeutics into tumor cells. For this application, the uptake of NMs by tumor cells is usually a prerequisite to deliver the cargo to intracellular locations, which mainly relies on endocytosis. NMs can enter cells through a variety of endocytosis pathways. Different endocytosis pathways exhibit different intracellular trafficking routes and diverse subcellular localizations. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding of endocytosis mechanisms is necessary for increasing cellular entry efficiency and to trace the fate of NMs after internalization. This review focuses on endocytosis pathways of NMs in tumor cells, mainly including clathrin- and caveolae-mediated endocytosis pathways, involving effector molecules, expression difference of those molecules between normal and tumor cells, as well as the intracellular trafficking route of corresponding endocytosis vesicles. Then, the latest strategies for NMs to actively employ endocytosis are described, including improving tumor cellular uptake of NMs by receptor-mediated endocytosis, transporter-mediated endocytosis and enabling drug activity by changing intracellular routes. Finally, active targeting strategies towards intracellular organelles are also mentioned. This review will be helpful not only in explicating endocytosis and the trafficking process of NMs and elucidating anti-tumor mechanisms inside the cell but also in rendering new ideas for the design of highly efficacious and cancer-targeted NMs.Entities:
Keywords: caveolae; clathrin; endocytosis pathway; endosome; nanomedicine; organelle targeting
Year: 2020 PMID: 33268987 PMCID: PMC7701161 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S274289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Figure 1Schematic graph of the endocytosis pathways of nanomedicines (NMs). NMs enter cells through different endocytosis pathways, including clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME), caveolae-mediated endocytosis, clathrin- and caveolae-independent endocytosis (Arf6-, flotillin-, Cdc42- and RhoA-dependent endocytosis), macropinocytosis and phagocytosis. In all the pathways, NMs following the fundamental steps. i) Binding and budding. NMs interact with cell surface through non-specific interactions and are subsequently engulfed in the cell membrane to form invaginations; ii) Pinching off. Membrane invaginations are pinched off to form different endocytic vesicles (clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs), caveosomes, GPI-anchored protein-enriched early endosomal compartment (GEEC), macropinosome and phagosome). iii) Sorting and intracellular trafficking. Endocytic vesicles infuse into early endosomes, which act as a sorting machine and can carry the cargos to different destinations, such as lysosome, recycling endosome and subcellular organelles as illustrated in the graph.
Endocytosis Pathways for Nanomedicines in Tumor
| Pathways | Characters | Role in Tumor |
|---|---|---|
| Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) | Clathrin, AP2, cargo-specific adaptors, dynamin, actin are necessary. Formation of CCVs, 120 nm in an average diameter. | Mainly in charge of receptor-mediated endocytosis. Defects may be found in breast, renal and lung cancers and blood cancer like lymphomas and leukemias. |
| Caveolae-mediated endocytosis | Cav-1, cavin-1, dynamin and actin are necessary. Formation of caveolae, 60–80 nm in diameter. | Abundant in vascular endothelial cells, which facilitates trans-vascular endothelial cells delivery of NMs in tumor tissues. Upregulated in advanced-stage tumors. Uniformly distributed on the surface of epithelial cancer cell while absent at the apical side of confluent normal epithelial cells, which is benefit of NMs cellular entry in tumor cell. |
| Macropinocytosis | Clathrin-, caveolae- and dynamin-independent transient endocytosis. Formation of macropinosome in a diameter of 0.5–10 µm. | Often serve as a non-specific entry form in accompany with clathrin- and caveolae-mediated endocytosis. |
| Clathrin- and caveolae-independent endocytosis | Sub-classified as Arf6-, flotillin-, Cdc42- and RhoA-dependent endocytosis. Dynamin dependence is controversial. Endocytosis vesicles is 90 nm in an average diameter. | NMs entering cells via these pathways are not commonly reported. DNA-PAMAM polyplexes can achieve efficient gene delivery through flotillin-dependent endocytosis. |
Figure 2Molecular structures and process related to clathrin-mediated endocytosis. (A) Schematic diagram of clathrin molecular (left) and clathrin-coated lattice (right). Reproduced from Smith CJ et al. Clathrin coats at 21 Å resolution: a cellular assembly designed to recycle multiple membrane receptors. EMBO J (1998) 17: 4943–495. Copyright 1998 John Wiley and Sons.27 (B) Clathrin-coated lattice captured by electron microscope (scale bar = 100 nm). Modified with permission of Rockefeller University Press, from Heuser JE, Anderson RGW. Hypertonic media inhibit receptor-mediated endocytosis by blocking clathrin-coated pit formation. Journal of Cell Biology, 1989; 108(2): 389–400, Copyright 1989; permission conveyed through Copyright Clearance Centre Inc.28 (C) Electron microscope graph showing different stages of clathrin-mediated endocytosis of Transferrin modified colloidal gold granules. Modified with permission of Rockefeller University Press, from Harding C, Heuser J, Stahl P. Receptor-mediated endocytosis of transferrin and recycling of the transferrin receptor in rat reticulocytes. Journal of Cell Biology, Aug 1983; 97(2): 329–339, Copyright 1983; permission conveyed through Copyright Clearance Centre Inc.30 (scale bar = 100 nm).
Figure 3Schematic diagram and images of caveolae. (A) Schematic diagram of caveolae. (B) Thin-section electron microscopy image of fibroblast caveolae. Reproduced from Rothberg KG, Heuser JE, Donzell WC, Ying Y-S, Glenney JR, Anderson RGW. Caveolin, a protein component of caveolae membrane coats. Cell. 1992; 68(4): 673–682. Copyright 1992, with permission from Elsevier.52 (scale bar = 0.25 μm). (C) Rapid-freeze, deep-etch image of fibroblast caveolae. Reproduced with permission of Annual Reviews, Inc, from Anderson RG. The caveolae membrane system. Annu Rev Biochem. 1998; 67: 199–225, Copyright 1998; permission conveyed through Copyright Clearance Centre Inc.53 (scale bar = 0.1 μm).
Summary of Receptor-Ligand Pairs Used for Cancer Cell Targeting
| Receptor | Cells Over-Expressing the Receptor | Ligand |
|---|---|---|
| Transferrin receptor (TfR) | Breast, glioma, bladder, lung, prostate cancer; chronic lymphocytic leukemia, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma | Transferrin (Tf) |
| Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) | Breast, colorectal, brain, ovarian, pancreatic, and prostate cancer | Small molecules: |
| Folate receptor (FR) | Ovarian, lung, brain, and colorectal cancer | Folic acid (FA) |
| Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) | Prostate carcinomas, neovasculature of majority of the solid tumors | Anti-PSMA mAb, A10 PSMA aptamer |
| Urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) | Pancreatic cancer and tumor stromal cells | Recombinant amino-terminal fragment (ATF) peptide |
| Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) | Tumor neovascular endothelial cells | Human recombinant VEGF isoform VEGF121; Anti-VEGFR-2 mAb |
| αvβ3 integrin receptor | Tumor neovascular endothelial cells | Arginine–Glycine–Aspartic acid (RGD) anchored peptides |
Transporters Used for Cancer Cell Targeting
| Transporter | Gene | Substrate | Expression in Cancer |
|---|---|---|---|
| OCTN2 (Organic cation/carnitine transporter 2) | L-Carnitine | Over-expressed in colon cancer | |
| ATB0,+ (Amino Acid Transporter B0,+) | Lysine | Over-expressed in solid tumors such as lung cancer, liver cancer, colon cancer, pancreatic cancer and cervical cancer | |
| LAT1 (system L amino acid transporter 1) | Glutamate | Mainly over-expressed in breast cancer, prostate cancer and lung cancer | |
| GLUT1 (glucose transporter 1) | Glucose, Mannose | Widely expressed in different cancers including pancreas, breast, lymphomas, prostate, head and neck cancer | |
| SMVT (Sodium-Dependent Multivitamin Transporter) | Biotin | Widely expressed in different cancers including ovarian cancer, breast cancer and hepatocellular carcinoma | |
| NIS (sodium/iodine symporter) | iodide ions | Over-expressed in thyroid and breast cancer | |
| NET (norepinephrine transporter) | Norepinephrine | Over-expressed in neuroblastoma and Pheochromocytoma |
Organelle Targeting Nanomedicines Mentioned in This Article
| Target Organelle | Targeting Strategies | Typical Nanomedicines | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lysosome | Enter cell through endosome-lysosome pathway, which destine to lysosomes and employ lysosomal pH for release of a cytotoxic drug within cancer cells. Encapsulating lysosomotropic agent to induce LMP. | Doxil | |
| Cytoplasm | Endosomal escape employing proton sponge effect. Surface modification with CPP, such as TAT and iRGD. | Hexadentate-PLGA polymer based NMs. | |
| Endoplasmic reticulum | Surface modification of ER signal peptide or ER-retrieval sequence. | PLGA NMs decorated with specific ER-targeting moieties (KKXX signal). | |
| Mitochondria | Surface modification with lipophilic cations like Triphenylphosphonium (TPP) or arginine-rich peptide octaarginine (R8) Inorganic NMs | TOS-TPP-Obt-NPs, a phosphatidylcholine (PC)-based TPP-coated positively charged NM, leading to mitochondrial mediated cellular apoptosis in HeLa cells. | |
| Nucleus | Conjugation of nuclear localization signal (NLS) to the NMs Combined modification of NLS with CPP | PLGA based NMs, cargo-loaded mesoporous silica NMs (MSNs) decorated with NLS |