Protein
drugs with intracellular targets like Granzyme B (GrB) have demonstrated
great proliferative inhibition activity in cancer cells. Their clinical
translation, however, relies on the development of safe, efficient,
and selective protein-delivery vehicles. Here, we report that epidermal
growth factor receptor (EGFR) and CD44 dual-targeted multifunctional
hyaluronic acid nanogels (EGFR/CD44-NGs) boost protein delivery to
ovarian and breast cancers in vitro and in vivo. EGFR/CD44-NGs obtained
via nanoprecipitation and photoclick chemistry from hyaluronic acid
derivatives with tetrazole, GE11 peptide/tetrazole, and cystamine
methacrylate groups had nearly quantitative loading of therapeutic
proteins like cytochrome C (CC) and GrB, a small size of ca. 165 nm,
excellent stability in serum, and fast protein release under a reductive
condition. Flow cytometry assays showed that EGFR/CD44-NGs exhibited
over 6-fold better uptake in CD44 and EGFR-positive SKOV-3 ovarian
cancer cells than CD44-NGs. In accordance, GrB-loaded EGFR/CD44-NGs
(GrB-EGFR/CD44-NGs) displayed enhanced caspase activity and growth
inhibition in SKOV-3 cells as compared to GrB-loaded CD44-NGs (GrB-CD44-NGs)
control. Intriguingly, the therapeutic studies in SKOV-3 human ovarian
carcinoma and MDA-MB-231 human breast tumor xenografted in nude mice
revealed that GrB-EGFR/CD44-NGs at a low dose of 3.85 nmol GrB equiv/kg
induced nearly complete growth suppression of both tumors, which was
obviously more effective than GrB-CD44-NGs, without causing any adverse
effects. EGFR and CD44 dual-targeted multifunctional hyaluronic acid
nanogels have appeared as a safe and efficacious platform for cancer
protein therapy.