4.7 Article

The Effects of Particle Size and Molecular Targeting on the Intratumoral and Subcellular Distribution of Polymeric Nanoparticles

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 1195-1208

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/mp100038h

Keywords

Copolymer micelles; nanoparticle; in vivo transport; tumor penetration; subcellular distribution; drug delivery

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Canadian Breast Cancer Research Alliance
  3. Ontario Institute for Cancer Research
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  5. Hoffman-La Roche/Rosemarie Hager
  6. Lorne F. Lambier
  7. MDS-Nordion

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The current study describes the impact of particle size and/or molecular targeting (epidermal growth factor, EGF) on the in vivo transport of block copolymer micelles (BCMs) in athymic mice bearing human breast cancer xenografts that express differential levels of EGF receptors (EGFR). BCMs with diameters of 25 nm (BCM-25) and 60 nm (BCM-60) were labeled with indium-111 (In-111) or a fluorescent probe to provide a quantitative and qualitative means of evaluating their whole body, intratumoral, and subcellular distributions. BCM-25 was found to clear rapidly from the plasma compared to BCM-60, leading to an almost 2-fold decrease in their total tumor accumulation. However, the tumoral clearance of BCM-25 was delayed through EGF functionalization, enabling the targeted BCM-25 (T-BCM-25) to achieve a comparable level of total tumor deposition as the nontargeted BCM-60 (NT-BCM-60). Confocal fluorescence microscopy combined with MATLAB analyses revealed that NT-BCM-25 diffuses further away from the blood vessels (D-mean = 42 +/- 9 mu m) following extravasation, compared to NT-BCM-60 which mainly remains in the perivascular regions (Dmean = 23 +/- 4 mu m). The introduction of molecular targeting imposes the binding site barrier effect, which retards the tumor penetration of T-BCM-25 (D-mean = 29 +/- 7 mu m, p < 0.05). The intrinsic nuclear translocation property of EGF/EGFR leads to a significant increase in the nuclear uptake of T-BCM-25 in vitro and in vivo via active transport. Overall, these results highlight the need to consider multiple design parameters in the development of nanosystems for delivery of anticancer agents.

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