6533b828fe1ef96bd1287abc

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Polyaminoacid–doxorubicin prodrug micelles as highly selective therapeutics for targeted cancer therapy

Gaetano GiammonaSimona CamporaNicolò MauroGiorgia AdamoGiulio GhersiCinzia Scialabba

subject

ChemistryGeneral Chemical EngineeringEndocytosis Pathway02 engineering and technologyGeneral ChemistryProdrugPharmacology010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesMicelleIn vitro0104 chemical sciencesCancer cellmedicineCytotoxic T cellDoxorubicin0210 nano-technologyprodrugs polymers doxorubicin breast cancerConjugatemedicine.drug

description

An amphiphilic copolymer carrying high-dose doxorubicin (21% on a weight basis), PHEA–EDA–P,C–Doxo, was prepared by coupling doxorubicin with a biocompatible polyaminoacid through a pH-sensitive spacer. Additional derivatization with 4-pentynoic acid endows it with self-assembling properties by means of π–π stacking. These micelles can be triggered to promptly release drug in lysosomes (∼40% in 12 h) through pH-dependent micelle hydrolysis after uptake. In vitro tests on co-cultures of cancer (MDA-MB 231) and normal (HB-2) breast cells proved that the conjugate was selectively internalized into the former rather than normal cells, exploiting the caveolae-dependent endocytosis pathway, explaining the selective cytotoxic effect toward cancer cells. Intracellular trafficking study of MDA-MB 231 showed that the delivery of the endocytosed drug occurs through the direct fusion of caveosomes with late lysosomes, triggering a massive release in the cytoplasm, bringing about cell death. Dose-effectiveness and mechanistic data indicate that PHEA–EDA–P,C–Doxo is endowed with a distinctive combination of selectivity and pharmacological potency (EC50 13 μM, Emax = 77% and EC50 > 25 μM, Emax = 21% for cancer and healthy cells respectively) that makes it an excellent candidate for future preclinical studies.

https://doi.org/10.1039/c6ra14935a