4.7 Article

L-Peptide functionalized dual-responsive nanoparticles for controlled paclitaxel release and enhanced apoptosis in breast cancer cells

Journal

DRUG DELIVERY
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 1275-1288

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10717544.2018.1477863

Keywords

L-Peptide; dual-responsive; apoptosis; nanoparticles; anticancer efficacy

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [16410723700]
  2. Biomedical Textile Materials 111 Project of the Ministry of Education of China [B07024]
  3. UK China Joint Laboratory for Therapeutic Textiles (Donghua University)
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81460647]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Nanoparticles and macromolecular carriers have been widely used to increase the efficacy of chemotherapeutics, largely through passive accumulation provided by their enhanced permeability and retention effect. However, the therapeutic efficacy of nanoscale anticancer drug delivery systems is severely truncated by their low tumor-targetability and inefficient drug release at the target site. Here, the design and development of novel l-peptide functionalized dual-responsive nanoparticles (L-CS-g-PNIPAM-PTX) for active targeting and effective treatment of GRP78-overexpressing human breast cancer in vitro and in vivo are reported. L-CS-g-PNIPAM-PTX NPs have a relative high drug loading (13.5%) and excellent encapsulation efficiency (74.3%) and an average diameter of 275 nm. The release of PTX is slow at pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C but greatly accelerated at pH 5.0 and 37 degrees C. MTT assays and confocal experiments showed that the L-CS-g-PNIPAM-PTX NPs possessed high targetability and antitumor activity toward GRP78 overexpressing MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells. As expected, L-CS-g-PNIPAM-PTX NPs could effectively treat mice bearing MDA-MB-231 human breast tumor xenografts with little side effects, resulting in complete inhibition of tumor growth and a high survival rate over an experimental period of 60 days. These results indicate that L-peptide-functionalized acid - and thermally activated - PTX prodrug NPs have a great potential for targeted chemotherapy in breast cancer.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available