posted on 2018-11-28, 00:00authored byXiang Ling, Jiasheng Tu, Junqing Wang, Aram Shajii, Na Kong, Chan Feng, Ye Zhang, Mikyung Yu, Tian Xie, Zameer Bharwani, Bader M. Aljaeid, Bingyang Shi, Wei Tao, Omid C. Farokhzad
Spurred
by recent progress in medicinal chemistry, numerous lead
compounds have sprung up in the past few years, although the majority
are hindered by hydrophobicity, which greatly challenges druggability.
In an effort to assess the potential of platinum (Pt) candidates,
the nanosizing approach to alter the pharmacology of hydrophobic Pt(IV)
prodrugs in discovery and development settings is described. The construction
of a self-assembled nanoparticle (NP) platform, composed of amphiphilic
lipid-polyethylene glycol (PEG) for effective delivery of Pt(IV) prodrugs
capable of resisting thiol-mediated detoxification through a glutathione
(GSH)-exhausting effect, offers a promising route to synergistically
improving safety and efficacy. After a systematic screening, the optimized
NPs (referred to as P6 NPs) exhibited small particle
size (99.3 nm), high Pt loading (11.24%), reliable dynamic stability
(∼7 days), and rapid redox-triggered release (∼80% in
3 days). Subsequent experiments on cells support the emergence of
P6 NPs as a highly effective means of transporting a
lethal dose of cargo across cytomembranes through macropinocytosis.
Upon reduction by cytoplasmic reductants, particularly GSH, P6 NPs under disintegration released sufficient active Pt(II)
metabolites, which covalently bound to target DNA and induced significant
apoptosis. The PEGylation endowed P6 NPs with in vivo longevity and tumor specificity, which were essential
to successfully inhibiting the growth of cisplatin-sensitive and -resistant
xenograft tumors, while effectively alleviating toxic side-effects
associated with cisplatin. P6 NPs are, therefore, promising
for overcoming the bottleneck in the development of Pt drugs for oncotherapy.