4.7 Article

Nanoparticle delivery of an AKT/PDK1 inhibitor improves the therapeutic effect in pancreatic cancer

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NANOMEDICINE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages 5653-5665

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S68511

Keywords

nanoparticles; pancreatic cancer; AKT; bioluminescence imaging; drug delivery

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute through NIH (National Institutes of Health) [CA139503]
  2. Hirshberg Foundation for Pancreatic Cancer Research
  3. University of Arizona Cancer Center [NIH CA023074]
  4. CONACYT fellowship

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The K-ras mutation in pancreatic cancer can inhibit drug delivery and increase drug resistance. This is exemplified by the therapeutic effect of PH-427, a small molecule inhibitor of AKT/PDK1, which has shown a good therapeutic effect against a BxPC3 pancreatic cancer model that has K-ras, but has a poor therapeutic effect against a MiaPaCa-2 pancreatic cancer model with mutant K-ras. To increase the therapeutic effect of PH-427 against the MiaPaCa-2 pancreatic cancer model with mutant K-ras, we encapsulated PH-427 into poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles (PNP) to form drug-loaded PH-427-PNP. PH-427 showed a biphasic release from PH-427-PNP over 30 days during studies in sodium phosphate buffer, and in vitro studies revealed that the PNP was rapidly internalized into MiaPaCa-2 tumor cells, suggesting that PNP can improve PH-427 delivery into cells harboring mutant K-ras. In vivo studies of an orthotopic MiaPaCa-2 pancreatic cancer model showed reduced tumor load with PH-427-PNP as compared with treatment using PH-427 alone or with no treatment. Ex vivo studies confirmed the in vivo results, suggesting that PNP can improve drug delivery to pancreatic cancer harboring mutant K-ras.

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