Acidity-Triggered Tumor Retention/Internalization
of Chimeric Peptide for Enhanced Photodynamic Therapy and Real-Time
Monitoring of Therapeutic Effects
posted on 2017-04-26, 00:00authored byKai Han, Wei-Yun Zhang, Zhao-Yu Ma, Shi-Bo Wang, Lu-Ming Xu, Jia Liu, Xian-Zheng Zhang, He-You Han
Photodynamic
therapy (PDT) holds great promise in tumor treatment. Nevertheless,
it remains highly desirable to develop easy-to-fabricated PDT systems
with improved tumor accumulation/internalization and timely therapeutic
feedback. Here, we report a tumor-acidity-responsive chimeric peptide
for enhanced PDT and noninvasive real-time apoptosis imaging. Both
in vitro and in vivo studies revealed that a tumor mildly acidic microenvironment
could trigger rapid protonation of carboxylate anions in chimeric
peptide, which led to increased ζ potential, improved hydrophobicity,
controlled size enlargement, and precise morphology switching from
sphere to spherocylinder shape of the chimeric peptide. All of these
factors realized superfast accumulation and prolonged retention in
the tumor region, selective cellular internalization, and enhanced
PDT against the tumor. Meanwhile, this chimeric peptide could further
generate reactive oxygen species and initiate cell apoptosis during
PDT. The subsequent formation of caspase-3 enzyme hydrolyzed the chimeric
peptide, achieving a high signal/noise ratio and timely fluorescence
feedback. Importantly, direct utilization of the acidity responsiveness
of a biofunctional Asp–Glu–Val–Asp–Gly
(DEVDG, caspase-3 enzyme substrate) peptide sequence dramatically
simplified the preparation and increased the performance of the chimeric
peptide furthest.