posted on 2020-11-17, 22:31authored byMingyu Wang, Li Zhang, Yanfei Cai, Yang Yang, Lipeng Qiu, Yiting Shen, Jian Jin, Juan Zhou, Jinghua Chen
Human serum albumin (HSA) has the
characteristics of biocompatibility
and long circulation, which is widely used as the carrier of insoluble
anticancer drugs, but it also has some disadvantages such as weak
tumor targeting and uncontrollable drug release. Herein, HSA was modified
to improve its biological performance by introducing polyhistidine
(pHis), matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) digestion, and Arg-Gly-Asp
(RGD) peptide at the separated end of HSA through gene fusion technology.
The resulting protein expressed by <i>Pichia pastoris</i> could self-assemble into 3RGD-HSA-MMP-18His nanoparticles (RHMH18
NPs) accompanied by loading hydrophobic drug paclitaxel (PTX) into
the polyhistidine micelle core. RHMH18 NPs exhibited active tumor
targeting in high efficiency owing to the RGD-mediated specific binding
toward α<sub>ν</sub>β<sub>3</sub>-integrin upregulated
on tumor vasculature endothelium, resulting in the enrichment of therapeutic
substances in tumor sites. Once reaching the tumor microenvironment,
RHMH18 NPs was cut off by MMP-2 to remove the HSA-3RGD moiety, leaving
the small and positively charged histidine micelle, which could penetrate
the deep part of tumor tissue more effectively. Finally, the histidine
micelle escaped from lysosome successfully and released drug in response
to pH. The <i>in vivo</i> experiments’ results demonstrated
that the three-stage propulsion RHMH18 NPs presented superior tumor
inhibition activity with minimal side effects, providing potential
strategies of protein based drug delivery systems for tumor therapy.