4.5 Article

Integration of phospholipid-hyaluronic acid-methotrexate nanocarrier assembly and amphiphilic drug-drug conjugate for synergistic targeted delivery and combinational tumor therapy

Journal

BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 6, Issue 7, Pages 1818-1833

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8bm00009c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31771029]
  2. Special Funding of China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2017T100472]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2016M602074]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province of China [2016J01406]
  5. Clinical Medicine Science and Technology Project of Jiangsu Province [BL2013015]
  6. Xiamen Science and Technology Project [3502Z20174071]

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Combinational cancer therapy has been considered as a promising strategy to achieve synergetic therapeutic effects and suppression of multidrug resistance. Herein, we adopted a combination of methotrexate (MTX), an antimetabolite acting on cytoplasm, and 10-hydroxycamptothecin (HCPT), an alkaloid acting on nuclei, to treat cancer. Given the different solubilities, membrane permeabilities, and anticancer mechanisms of both drugs, we developed a dual-targeting delivery system based on 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-hyaluronic acid (a principal ligand of CD44 receptors)-MTX (a selective ligand of folate receptors) nanoparticles, which was exploited to carry HCPT-MTX conjugate for synergistically boosting dual-drug co-delivery. The HCPT-MTX conjugate was synthesized by a blood-stable yet intracellularly hydrolysable ester bond. The core-shell-corona DSPE-HA-MTX nanoparticles encapsulating HCPT-MTX (HCPT-MTX@DHM) exhibited high drug entrapment efficiency (similar to 91.8%) and pH/esterase-controlled release behavior. Cellular uptake studies confirmed significant increase in the efficiency of selective internalization of HCPT-MTX@DHM via CD44/folate receptors compared with those of DSPE-HA nanoparticles encapsulating HCPT-MTX (HCPT-MTX@DH), both drugs, or each individual drug. Furthermore, in vivo near-infrared fluorescence and photoacoustic dual-modal imaging indicated that DiR-doped HCPT-MTX@DHM nanoparticles efficiently accumulated at the tumor sites through passive-plus-active targeting. Finally, the synergistic active targeting and synchronous dual-drug release at a synergistic drug-to-drug ratio resulted in highly synergetic tumor cell-killing and tumor growth inhibition in MCF-7 tumor-bearing mice. Therefore, HCPT-MTX@DHM nanoparticles can be an efficient and smart platform for tumor-targeting therapy.

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