| Literature DB >> 34130450 |
Furong Cheng1,2,3, Qingqing Pan1, Wenxia Gao4, Yuji Pu1, Kui Luo5, Bin He1.
Abstract
Mitochondrial drug delivery has attracted increasing attention in various mitochondrial dysfunction-associated disorders such as cancer owing to the important role of energy production. Herein, we report a lysosomal pH-activated mitochondrial-targeting polymer nanoparticle to overcome drug resistance by a synergy between mitochondrial delivery of doxorubicin (DOX, an anticancer drug) and erlotinib-mediated inhibition of drug efflux. The obtained nanoparticles, DE-NPs could maintain negative charge and have long blood circulation while undergoing charge reversal at lysosomal pH after internalization by cancer cells. Thereafter, the acidity-activated polycationic and hydrophobic polypeptide domains boost lysosomal escape and mitochondrial-targeting drug delivery, leading to mitochondrial dysfunction, ATP suppression, and cell apoptosis. Moreover, the suppressed ATP supply and erlotinib enabled dual inhibition of drug efflux by DOX-resistant MCF-7/ADR cells, leading to significantly augmented intracellular DOX accumulation and a synergistic anticancer effect with a 17-fold decrease of IC50 relative to DOX. In vivo antitumor study demonstrates that DE-NPs efficiently suppressed the tumor burden in MCF-7/ADR tumor-bearing mice and led to negligible toxicity. This work establishes that a combination of mitochondrial drug delivery and drug efflux inhibition could be a promising strategy for combating multidrug resistance.Entities:
Keywords: charge reversal; chemotherapy resistance; doxorubicin; mitochondrial targeting; nanoparticles
Year: 2021 PMID: 34130450 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c03196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229