4.8 Article

Polyamine-Responsive Morphological Transformation of a Supramolecular Peptide for Specific Drug Accumulation and Retention in Cancer Cells

Journal

SMALL
Volume 17, Issue 43, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202101139

Keywords

cucurbituril; morphology transformation; polyamine-responsive; self-assembly; supramolecular-peptide

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21871301]
  2. Science and Technology Development Fund (FDCT), Macau SAR [0121/2018/A3]
  3. University of Macau [MYRG2017-00010-ICMS]

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A novel supramolecular-peptide derived nanodrug capable of transforming into microfibers within cancer cells has been developed, leading to enhanced accumulation and retention of the drug in tumor tissue. The polyamine-responsive nanodrug exhibits low toxicity against non-cancerous cells, offering a promising strategy for specific tumor therapy with minimal side effects. This work provides insights into the design of stimuli-responsive nanomaterials for precision medicine.
The precise accumulation and extended retention of nanomedicines in the tumor tissue has been highly desired for cancer therapy. Here a novel supramolecular-peptide derived nanodrug (SPN) that can be transformed to microfibers in response to intracellular polyamine in cancer cells for significantly enhanced tumor specific accumulation and retention is developed. The supramolecular-peptide is constructed via the non-covalent interactions between cucurbit[7]uril (CB[7]) and Phe on Phe-Phe-Val-Leu-Lys-camptothecin conjugates (FFVLK-CPT, PC). The resultant amphiphilic supramolecular complex subsequently self-assembles into nanoparticles with a hydrodynamic diameter of 164.2 +/- 3.7 nm. Upon internalization into spermine-overexpressed cancer cells, the CB[7]-Phe host-guest pairs can be competitively dissociated by spermine and can release free PC, which immediately form beta-sheet structures and subsequently reorganize into microfibers, leading to dramatically improved accumulation, retention, and sustained release of CPT in tumor cells for highly effective cancer therapy. Accordingly, this SPN exhibit rather low toxicity against non-cancerous cells due to the morphological stability and fast exocytosis of the nanodrugs in those cells without abundant spermine. This study reports the first supramolecular peptide capable of polyamine-responsive nanoparticle-to-microfiber transformation for specific tumor therapy with minimal side effects. This work also offers novel insights to the design and development of stimuli-responsive nanomaterials as precision medicine.

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