4.8 Article

AMP-guided tumour-specific nanoparticle delivery via adenosine A1 receptor

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 83, Issue -, Pages 37-50

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2016.01.011

Keywords

AMP ligand; Tumour target; Nanoparticle; A(1)R; Imaging

Funding

  1. National Special Fund for State Key Laboratory of Bioreactor Engineering [2060204]

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Active targeting-ligands have been increasingly used to functionalize nanoparticles for tumour-specific clinical applications. Here we utilize nucleotide adenosine 5'-monophosphate (AMP) as a novel ligand to functionalize polymer-based fluorescent nanoparticles (NPs) for tumour-targeted imaging. We demonstrate that AMP-conjugated NPs (NPs-AMP) efficiently bind to and are following internalized into colon cancer cell CW-2 and breast cancer cell MDA-MB-468 in vitro. RNA interference and inhibitor assays reveal that the targeting effects mainly rely on the specific binding of AMP to adenosine A(1) receptor (A(1)R), which is greatly up-regulated in cancer cells than in matched normal cells. More importantly, NPs-AMP specifically accumulate in the tumour site of colon and breast tumour xenografts and are further internalized into the tumour cells in vivo via tail vein injection, confirming that the high in vitro specificity of AMP can be successfully translated into the in vivo efficacy. Furthermore, NPs-AMP exhibit an active tumour-targeting behaviour in various colon and breast cancer cells, which is positively related to the up-regulation level of A1R in cancer cells, suggesting that AMP potentially suits for more extensive A(1)R-overexpressing cancer models. This work establishes AMP to be a novel tumour-targeting ligand and provides a promising strategy for future diagnostic or therapeutic applications. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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