4.8 Article

Mucus Penetrating and Cell-Binding Polyzwitterionic Micelles as Potent Oral Nanomedicine for Cancer Drug Delivery

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202109189

Keywords

cancer drug delivery; mucus penetrating; oral nanomedicines; polyzwitterionic micelles; transcytosis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation [51833008]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2021YFA1201200]
  3. Zhejiang Key Research Program [2020C01123]
  4. Core Facilities, Life Sciences Institute of Zhejiang University

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The study introduces a novel polymeric micelle that can penetrate mucus layer and be absorbed by villi, efficiently delivering anticancer drugs to tumors with improved therapeutic efficacy.
Orally administrable anticancer nanomedicines are highly desirable due to their easy and repeatable administration, but are not yet feasible because the current nanomedicine cannot simultaneously overcome the strong mucus and villi barriers and thus have very low bioavailability (BA). Herein, this work presents the first polymeric micelle capable of fast mucus permeation and villi absorption and delivering paclitaxel (PTX) efficiently to tumors with therapeutic efficacy even better than intravenously administered polyethylene glycol based counterpart or free PTX. Poly[2-(N-oxide-N,N-diethylamino)ethyl methacrylate] (OPDEA), a water-soluble polyzwitterion, is highly nonfouling to proteins and other biomacromolecules such as mucin but can weakly bind to phospholipids. Therefore, the micelle of its block copolymer with poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (OPDEA-PCL) can efficiently permeate through the viscous mucus and bind to villi, which triggers transcytosis-mediated transepithelial transport into blood circulation for tumor accumulation. The orally administered micelles deliver PTX to tumors, efficiently inhibiting the growth of HepG2 and patient-derived hepatocellular carcinoma xenografts and triple-negative breast tumors. These results demonstrate that OPDEA-based micelles may serve as an efficient oral nanomedicine for delivering other small molecules or even large molecules.

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