4.8 Article

Nanomotor-Enabled pH-Responsive Intracellular Delivery of Caspase-3: Toward Rapid Cell Apoptosis

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages 5367-5374

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b01926

Keywords

nanomotor; caspase-3; apoptosis; pH-responsive polymer; ultrasound; intracellular delivery

Funding

  1. Defense Threat Reduction Agency Joint Science and Technology Office for Chemical and Biological Defense [HDTRA1-13-1-0002, HDTRA1-14-1-0064]
  2. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health [R01CA200574]
  3. CONACYT

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Direct and efficient intracellular delivery of enzymes to cytosol holds tremendous therapeutic potential while remaining an unmet technical challenge. Herein, an ultrasound (US)-propelled nanomotor approach and a high-pH-responsive delivery strategy are reported to overcome this challenge using caspase-3 (CASP-3) as a model enzyme. Consisting of a gold nanowire (AuNW) motor with a pH-responsive polymer coating, in which the CASP-3 is loaded, the resulting nanomotor protects the enzyme from release and deactivation prior to reaching an intracellular environment. However, upon entering a cell and exposure to the higher intracellular pH, the polymer coating is dissolved, thereby directly releasing the active CASP-3 enzyme to the cytosol and causing rapid cell apoptosis. In vitro studies using gastric cancer cells as a model cell line demonstrate that such a motion-based active delivery approach leads to remarkably high apoptosis efficiency within a significantly shorter time and with a lower amount of CASP-3 compared to other control groups not involving US-propelled nanomotors. For instance, the reported nanomotor system can achieve 80% apoptosis of human gastric adenocarcinoma cells within only 5 min, which dramatically outperforms other CASP-3 delivery approaches. These results indicate that the US-propelled nanomotors may act as a powerful vehicle for cytosolic delivery of active therapeutic proteins, which would offer an attractive means to enhance the current landscape of intracellular protein delivery and therapy. While CASP-3 is selected as a model protein in this study, the same nanomotor approach can be readily applied to a variety of different therapeutic proteins.

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