Tumor cells are characterized as redox-heterogeneous intracellular microenvironment due to the simultaneous overproduction of reactive oxygen species and glutathione. Rational design of redox-responsive drug delivery systems is a promising prospect for efficient cancer therapy. Herein, six paclitaxel-citronellol conjugates are synthesized using either thioether bond, disulfide bond, selenoether bond, diselenide bond, carbon bond or carbon-carbon bond as linkages. These prodrugs can self-assemble into uniform nanoparticles with ultrahigh drug-loading capacity. Interestingly, sulfur/selenium/carbon bonds significantly affect the efficiency of prodrug nanoassemblies. The bond angles/dihedral angles impact the self-assembly, stability and pharmacokinetics. The redox-responsivity of sulfur/selenium/carbon bonds has remarkable influence on drug release and cytotoxicity. Moreover, selenoether/diselenide bond possess unique ability to produce reactive oxygen species, which further improve the cytotoxicity of these prodrugs. Our findings give deep insight into the impact of chemical linkages on prodrug nanoassemblies and provide strategies to the rational design of redox-responsive drug delivery systems for cancer therapy.
The current state of chemotherapy is far from satisfaction, restricted by the inefficient drug delivery and the off‐target toxicity. Prodrug nanoassemblies are emerging as efficient platforms for chemotherapy. Herein, three docetaxel dimeric prodrugs are designed using diselenide bond, disulfide bond, or dicarbide bond as linkages. Interestingly, diselenide bond‐bridged dimeric prodrug can self‐assemble into stable nanoparticles with impressive high drug loading (≈70%, w/w). Compared with disulfide bond and dicarbide bond, diselenide bond greatly facilitates the self‐assembly of dimeric prodrug, and then improves the colloidal stability, blood circulation time, and antitumor efficacy of prodrug nanoassemblies. Furthermore, the redox‐sensitive diselenide bond can specifically respond to the overexpressed reactive oxygen species and glutathione in tumor cells, leading to tumor‐specific drug release. Therefore, diselenide bond bridged prodrug nanoassemblies exhibit discriminating cytotoxicity between tumor cells and normal cells, significantly alleviating the systemic toxicity of docetaxel. The present work gains in‐depth insight into the impact of diselenide bond on the dimeric prodrug nanoassemblies, and provides promising strategies for the rational design of the high efficiency–low toxicity chemotherapeutical nanomedicines.
OCTN2 (SLC22A5) is a Na -coupled absorption transporter for l-carnitine in small intestine. This study tests the potential of this transporter for oral delivery of therapeutic drugs encapsulated in l-carnitine-conjugated poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles (LC-PLGA NPs) and discloses the molecular mechanism for cellular endocytosis of transporter-targeting nanoparticles. Conjugation of l-carnitine to a surface of PLGA-NPs enhances the cellular uptake and intestinal absorption of encapsulated drug. In both cases, the uptake process is dependent on cotransporting ion Na . Computational OCTN2 docking analysis shows that the presence of Na is important for the formation of the energetically stable intermediate complex of transporter-Na -LC-PLGA NPs, which is also the first step in cellular endocytosis of nanoparticles. The transporter-mediated intestinal absorption of LC-PLGA NPs occurs via endocytosis/transcytosis rather than via the traditional transmembrane transport. The portal blood versus the lymphatic route is evaluated by the plasma appearance of the drug in the control and lymph duct-ligated rats. Absorption via the lymphatic system is the predominant route in the oral delivery of the NPs. In summary, LC-PLGA NPs can effectively target OCTN2 on the enterocytes for enhancing oral delivery of drugs and the critical role of cotransporting ions should be noticed in designing transporter-targeting nanoparticles.
Recently, nanomedicine without drug carriers has attracted many pharmacists' attention. A novel paclitaxel-s-s-paclitaxel (PTX-s-s-PTX) conjugate with high drug loading (∼78%, w/w) was synthesized by conjugating paclitaxel to paclitaxel by using disulfide linkage. The conjugate could self-assemble into uniform nanoparticles (NPs) with 1,1-dioctadecyl-3,3,3,3-tetramethylindotricarbocyanine iodide (DiR) encapsulated within the core of PTX-s-s-PTX NPs for photothermal therapy (PTT). The DiR-loaded self-assembled nanoparticles (DSNs) had a mean diameter of about 150 nm and high stability in biological condition. A disulfide bond is utilized as a redox-responsive linkage to facilitate a rapid release of paclitaxel in tumor cells. DSNs indicated significant cytotoxicity as a result of the synergetic chemo-thermal therapy. DSNs were featured with excellent advantages, including high drug loading, redox-responsive releasing behavior of paclitaxel, capability of loading with photothermal agents, and combinational therapy with PTT. In such a potent nanosystem, prodrug and photothermal strategy are integrated into one system to facilitate the therapy efficiency.
Breast cancer leads to high mortality of women in the world. Docetaxel (DTX) has been widely applied as one of the first-line chemotherapeutic drugs for breast cancer therapy. However, the clinical outcome of DTX is far from satisfaction due to its poor drug delivery efficiency. Herein, a novel disulfide bond bridged oleate prodrug of DTX was designed and synthesized to construct self-delivering prodrug-based nanosystem for improved anticancer efficacy of DTX. The uniquely engineered prodrug-nanoassemblies showed redox-responsive drug release, increased cellular uptake and comparable cytotoxicity against 4T1 breast cancer cells when compared with free DTX. In vivo, oleate prodrug-based nanoparticles (NPs) demonstrated significantly prolonged systemic circulation and increased accumulation in tumor site. As a result, prodrug NPs produced a notable antitumor activity in 4T1 breast cancer xenograft in BALB/c mice. This prodrug-based self-assembly and self-delivery strategy could be utilized to improve the delivery efficiency of DTX for breast cancer treatment.
The use of bacteria to specifically migrate to cancerous tissue and elicit an antitumor immune response provides a promising platform against cancer with significantly high potency. With dozens of clinical trials underway, some researchers hold the following views: “humans are nearing the first commercial live bacteria therapeutic.” However, the facultative anaerobe Salmonella typhimurium VNP20009, which is particularly safe and shows anticancer effects in preclinical studies, had failed in a phase I clinical trial due to low tumor regression and undesired dose-dependent side effects. This is almost certain to disappoint people’s inflated expectations, but it is noted that recent state-of-the-art research has turned attention to bacteria-mediated synergistic cancer therapy (BMSCT). In this review, the foundation of bacteria-mediated bio-therapy is outlined. Then, we summarize the potential benefits and challenges of bacterial bio-therapy in combination with different traditional anticancer therapeutic modalities (chemotherapy, photothermal therapy, reactive oxygen and nitrogen species therapy, immunotherapy, or prodrug-activating therapy) in the past 5 years. Next, we discuss multiple administration routes of BMSCT, highlighting potentiated antitumor responses and avoidance of potential side effects. Finally, we envision the opportunities and challenges for BMSCT development, with the purpose of inspiring medicinal scientists to widely utilize the microbiome approach in patient populations.
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