4.8 Article

'Adhesion and release' nanoparticle-mediated efficient inhibition of platelet activation disrupts endothelial barriers for enhanced drug delivery in tumors

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 269, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.120620

Keywords

Tumor permeation; Inhibition of platelet activation; Tumor endothelial barriers; Enzyme-responsive targeted nanoparticles; Pancreatic cancer

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81872428, 81703010]
  2. Major Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China [81690263]
  3. Shanghai Municipal Natural Science Foundation [19ZR1406200]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2016M600342]

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TM33-GON/TNA disrupts tumor vascular endothelial barriers by inhibiting platelet activation and aggregation, leading to enhanced drug penetration and improved antitumor efficacy of nanomedicines without increasing drug delivery to normal tissues; the treatment exhibits significant efficacy in a murine pancreatic cancer model and carries a low risk of systemic bleeding due to reversible restoration of disrupted endothelial junctions.
Activated platelets can maintain tumor vessel integrity, thereby leading to limited tumor perfusion and suboptimal antitumor efficacy of nanoparticle-based drugs. Herein, to disrupt the tumor vascular endothelial barriers by inhibiting the transformation of resting platelets to activated platelets, a TM33 peptide-modified gelatin/oleic acid nanoparticle loaded with tanshinone IIA (TNA) was constructed (TM33-GON/TNA). TM33-GON/TNA could adhere to activated platelets by specifically binding their superficial P-selectin and release TNA into the extra cellular space under matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) stimulation, leading to local high TNA exposure. Thus, platelet activation, adhesion, and aggregation, which occur in the local environment around the activated platelets, were efficiently inhibited, leading to leaky tumor endothelial junctions. Accordingly, TM33-GON/TNA treatment resulted in a 3.2-, 4.0-, and 11.2-fold increase in tumor permeation of Evans blue (macromolecule marker), small-sized Nab-PTX (similar to 10 nm), and large-sized DOX-Lip (similar to 100 nm), respectively, without elevating drug delivery to normal tissues. Ultimately, TM33-GON/TNA plus Nab-PTX exhibited superior antitumor efficacy with minimal side effects in a murine pancreatic cancer model. In addition, the TM33-GON/TNA-induced disrupted endothelial junctions were reversibly restored after the treatment because the number of platelets was not reduced, which implies a low risk of the undesirable systemic bleeding. Hence, TM33-GON/TNA represents a clinically translational adjuvant therapy to magnify the antitumor efficacy of existing nanomedicines in pancreatic cancer and other tumors with tight endothelial lining.

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