4.8 Article

Targeted and intracellular delivery of protein therapeutics by a boronated polymer for the treatment of bone tumors

Journal

BIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages 333-340

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2021.05.041

Keywords

Boronated polymer; Dendrimers; Intracellular protein delivery; Bone targeting; Cancer therapy

Funding

  1. Interdisciplinary Program of Shanghai Jiao Tong University [ZH2018ZDA18]
  2. ECNU Multifunctional Platform for Innovation [011]
  3. Flow Cytometry Core Facility at ECNU

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A bone-targeted protein nanomedicine was developed for the treatment of malignant bone tumors, showing high bone accumulation, surface charge property transformation at tumor sites, and enhanced anticancer activity. This approach provides a promising strategy for the development of protein-based nanomedicines targeting malignant bone tumors.
The treatment of malignant bone tumors by chemotherapeutics often receives poor therapeutic response due to the specific physiological bone environment, and thus calls for the development of new therapeutic options. Here, we reported a bone-targeted protein nanomedicine for this purpose. Saporin, a toxin protein, was co-assembled with a boronated polymer for intracellular protein delivery, and the formed nanoparticles were further coated with an anionic polymer poly (aspartic acid) to shield the positive charges on nanoparticles and provide the bone targeting function. The prepared ternary complex nanoparticles showed high bone accumulation both in vitro and in vivo, and could reverse the surface charge property from negative to positive after locating at tumor site triggered by tumor extracellular acidity. The boronated polymer in the de-shielded nanoparticles further promote intracellular delivery of saporin into tumor cells, exerting the anticancer activity of saporin by inactivation of ribosomes. As a result, the bone-targeted and saporin-loaded nanomedicine could kill cancer cells at a low saporin dose, and efficiently prevented the progression of osteosarcoma xenograft tumors and bone metastatic breast cancer in vivo. This study provides a facile and promising strategy to develop protein-based nanomedicines for the treatment of malignant bone tumors.

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