| Literature DB >> 35328540 |
Nikita Yabbarov1, Elena Nikolskaya1, Maria Sokol1, Mariia Mollaeva1, Margarita Chirkina1, Irina Seregina2, Mikhail Gulyaev3, Yury Pirogov4, Rem Petrov5.
Abstract
The conventional targeted delivery of chemotherapeutic and diagnostic agents utilizing nanocarriers is a promising approach for cancer theranostics. Unfortunately, this approach often faces hindered tumor access that decreases the therapeutic index and limits the further clinical translation of a developing drug. Here, we demonstrated a strategy of simultaneously double-targeting the drug to two distinct cites of tumor tissue: the tumor endothelium and cell surface receptors. We used fourth-generation polyamideamine dendrimers modified with a chelated Gd and functionalized with selectin ligand and alpha-fetoprotein receptor-binding peptide. According to the proposed strategy, IELLQAR peptide promotes the conjugate recruitment to the tumor inflammatory microenvironment and enhances extravasation through the interaction of nanodevice with P- and E-selectins expressed by endothelial cells. The second target moiety-alpha-fetoprotein receptor-binding peptide-enhances drug internalization into cancer cells and the intratumoral retention of the conjugate. The final conjugate contained 18 chelated Gd ions per dendrimer, characterized with a 32 nm size and a negative surface charge of around 18 mV. In vitro contrasting properties were comparable with commercially available Gd-chelate: r1 relaxivity was 3.39 for Magnevist and 3.11 for conjugate; r2 relaxivity was 5.12 for Magnevist and 4.81 for conjugate. By utilizing this dual targeting strategy, we demonstrated the increment of intratumoral accumulation, and a remarkable enhancement of antitumor effect, resulting in high-level synergy compared to monotargeted conjugates. In summary, the proposed strategy utilizing tumor tissue double-targeting may contribute to an enhancement in drug and diagnostic accumulation in aggressive tumors.Entities:
Keywords: alpha-fetoprotein; dendrimer; double-targeting; selectin; targeted delivery; vascular extravasation
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35328540 PMCID: PMC8955029 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23063119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923