4.7 Article

Nanoparticles Dual Targeting Both Myeloma Cells and Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts Simultaneously to Improve Multiple Myeloma Treatment

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13020274

Keywords

multiple myeloma; CAFs; PDGFR-β dual-targeting drug delivery; nanoparticles

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81600175, 81773283, 81670197, 81974007]

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A dual-targeting drug delivery system was developed to simultaneously target CAFs and myeloma cells, showing better therapeutic effects than targeting each cell type alone. In vitro cellular uptake and cytotoxicity tests demonstrated the system's advantages, while in vivo experiments confirmed its stronger anti-tumor efficacy compared to conventional methods.
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and myeloma cells could mutually drive myeloma progression, indicating that drug delivery to kill both CAFs and myeloma cells simultaneously could achieve better therapeutic benefits than to kill each cell type alone. Here, we designed a dual-targeting drug delivery system by conjugating paclitaxel (PTX)-loaded poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(lactic acid) nanoparticles (NPs) with a cyclic peptide (CNPs-PTX) with a special affinity with platelet-derived growth factor/platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR-beta) overexpressed on both CAFs and myeloma cells. Cellular uptake experiments revealed that the cyclic peptide modification on CNPs could significantly enhance CNPs uptake by both CAFs and myeloma cells compared with unmodified NPs. Cytotoxicity tests showed that CNPs-PTX was more toxic to both CAFs and myeloma cells compared with its counterpart PTX-loaded conventional NPs (NPs-PTX). In vivo imaging and biodistribution experiments showed that CNPs could abundantly accumulate in tumors and were highly co-localized with CAFs and myeloma cells. The in vivo anti-tumor experiments confirmed that the anti-myeloma efficacy of CNPs-PTX was significantly stronger than that of NPs-PTX and free drugs. In summary, it is the first time that a dual-targeting strategy was utilized in the field of myeloma treatment through targeting both CAFs and myeloma cells simultaneously, which harbors a high potential of clinical translation for myeloma treatment.

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