| Literature DB >> 33722611 |
Ladislav Sivák1, Vladimír Šubr2, Jiřina Kovářová1, Barbora Dvořáková1, Milada Šírová1, Blanka Říhová1, Eva Randárová2, Michal Kraus1, Jakub Tomala1, Martin Studenovský2, Michaela Vondráčková1, Radislav Sedláček3, Petr Makovický3, Jitka Fučíková4, Šárka Vošáhlíková5, Radek Špíšek4, Libor Kostka2, Tomáš Etrych6, Marek Kovář7.
Abstract
Drug repurposing is a promising strategy for identifying new applications for approved drugs. Here, we describe a polymer biomaterial composed of the antiretroviral drug ritonavir derivative (5-methyl-4-oxohexanoic acid ritonavir ester; RD), covalently bound to HPMA copolymer carrier via a pH-sensitive hydrazone bond (P-RD). Apart from being more potent inhibitor of P-glycoprotein in comparison to ritonavir, we found RD to have considerable cytostatic activity in six mice (IC50 ~ 2.3-17.4 μM) and six human (IC50 ~ 4.3-8.7 μM) cancer cell lines, and that RD inhibits the migration and invasiveness of cancer cells in vitro. Importantly, RD inhibits STAT3 phosphorylation in CT26 cells in vitro and in vivo, and expression of the NF-κB p65 subunit, Bcl-2 and Mcl-1 in vitro. RD also dampens chymotrypsin-like and trypsin-like proteasome activity and induces ER stress as documented by induction of PERK phosphorylation and expression of ATF4 and CHOP. P-RD nanomedicine showed powerful antitumor activity in CT26 and B16F10 tumor-bearing mice, which, moreover, synergized with IL-2-based immunotherapy. P-RD proved very promising therapeutic activity also in human FaDu xenografts and negligible toxicity predetermining these nanomedicines as side-effect free nanosystem. The therapeutic potential could be highly increased using the fine-tuned combination with other drugs, i.e. doxorubicin, attached to the same polymer system. Finally, we summarize that described polymer nanomedicines fulfilled all the requirements as potential candidates for deep preclinical investigation.Entities:
Keywords: Antitumor activity; Polymer carrier; Proteasome inhibition; Ritonavir derivate; STAT3 signaling inhibition; pH-controlled release
Year: 2021 PMID: 33722611 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2021.03.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776