| Literature DB >> 34543934 |
Mingyuan Li1, Siyu Ma2, Xiangyang Xie3, Nan Liu4, Zhiping Li4, Zhenbo Yang5, Guangyu Gao6, Shiqin Li7, Yuan Li7, Shuangshuang Li7, Xingguo Mei4, Hui Zhang8.
Abstract
To construct an artificial low-density lipoprotein (aLDL) that highly mimics low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in vivo, and deliver vincristine (VCR) - doxorubicin (DOX) simultaneously, the 100 nm and 35 nm DOX-VCR-aLDLs (DV-aLDLs) were constructed, then the physicochemical characteristics were evaluated. Through in vitro inverse gravity diffusion experiment, the tumour cake and sphere model experiment, draw a conclusion that the diffusion of 35 nm DV-aLDLs was stronger than 100 nm DV-aLDLs, and the tumour retention of 35 nm DV-aLDLs was better than the DV-solution. In addition, the three-dimension (3D) in vivo distribution imaging of aLDLs was performed on HepG-2 tumour-bearing nude mice, followed by the biodistribution and therapeutic efficacy on these xenograft models. Taking advantage of better diffusion capacity in tumour tissue, as well as the synergistic effect of VCR and DOX, the 35 nm DV-aLDL had the strongest efficacy and the lowest toxicity. High entrapment efficiency and stability, both active and passive targeting, making aLDL a potential carrier for tumour-targeted therapy at the same time.Entities:
Keywords: Artificial low-density lipoprotein; Doxorubicin; Enhanced permeability and retention effect; Tumour targeting; Vincristine
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34543934 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2021.113802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Chem ISSN: 0223-5234 Impact factor: 6.514