4.7 Article

Development and Validation of a Targeted Treatment for Brain Tumors Using a Multi-Drug Loaded, Relapse-Resistant Polymeric Theranostic

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BIOMACROMOLECULES
卷 24, 期 6, 页码 2674-2690

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.3c00138

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This study developed a multifunctional polymer platform for treating treatment-resistant glioblastoma (GBM) by using targeted nanomedicine. The polymer was synthesized via reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer polymerization and included temozolomide (TMZ) as a polymerizable monomer, PEG units for biocompatibility, and hydrazide moieties for attaching a secondary drug. The polymer showed improved therapeutic efficacy in overcoming resistance to TMZ when attached with a DNA repair protein inhibitor. Targeted delivery to GBM tumors using a specific antibody further enhanced the therapeutic effect of the polymer. The study highlights the potential benefit of this formulation for delivering multi-drug combinations to resistant GBM tumor cells.
This study aimed to develop a multifunctional polymer platform that could address the issue of treatment resistance when using conventional chemotherapeutics to treat glioblastoma (GBM). An antibody-conjugated, multi-drug loaded hyperbranched polymer was developed that provided a platform to evaluate the role of targeted nanomedicine treatments in overcoming resistant GBM by addressing the various complications with current clinically administered formulations. The polymer was synthesized via reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer polymerization and included the clinical first-line alkylating agent temozolomide (TMZ) which was incorporated as a polymerizable monomer, poly (ethylene (PEG) units to impart biocompatibility and enable conjugation with alpha PEG-alpha EphA2 bispecific antibody (alpha EphA2 BsAb) for tumor targeting, and hydrazide moieties for attachment of a secondary drug which allows exploration of synergistic therapies. To overcome the resistance to TMZ, the O6 alkylguanine DNA alkyltransferase (AGT, DNA repair protein) inhibitor, dialdehyde O6 benzylguanine (DABG) was subsequently conjugated to the polymer via an acid labile hydrazone linker to facilitate controlled release under conditions encountered within the tumor microenvironment. The prolonged degradation half-life (4-5 h) of the polymer conjugated TMZ in vitro offered a potential avenue to overcome the inability to deliver these drugs in combination at therapeutic doses. Although only 20% of DABG could be released within the studied timeframe (192 h) under conditions mimicking the acidic nature of the tumor environment, cytotoxicity evaluation using cell assays confirmed the improved therapeutic efficacy toward resistant GBM cells after attaching DABG to the polymer delivery vehicle. Of note, when the polymeric delivery vehicle was specifically targeted to receptors (Ephrin A2) on the surface of the GBM cells using our in-house developed EphA2 specific BsAb, the dual-drug-loaded polymer exhibited an improved therapeutic effect on TMZresistant cells compared to the free drug combination. Both in vitro and in vivo targeting studies showed high uptake of the construct to GBM tumors with an upregulated EphA2 receptor (T98G and U251) compared to a tumor that had low expression (U87MG), where a dual tumor xenograft model was used to demonstrate the enhanced accumulation in tumor tissue in vivo. Despite the synthetic challenges of developing systems to effectively deliver controlled doses of TMZ and DABG, these studies highlight the potential benefit of this formulation for delivering multi-drug combinations to resistant GBM tumor cells and offer a platform for future optimization in therapeutic studies.

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