posted on 2019-02-25, 00:00authored bySara G.
T. Pereira, Samo Hudoklin, Mateja Erdani Kreft, Nina Kostevsek, Marc C. A. Stuart, Wafa T. Al-Jamal
L-377,202
prodrug (Dox-PSA) was in phase I clinical trials for
patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).
It consists of doxorubicin (Dox) conjugated to a prostate specific
antigen (PSA)-cleavable peptide that can be selectively activated
by secreted PSA at the tumor site. However, despite the initial promising
results, further clinical testing with Dox-PSA was halted due to toxicity
concerns emerging from non-PSA-specific cleavage, following systemic
administration. In the present study, we have reported, for the first
time, the intracellular activation of Dox-PSA, where Dox nuclear uptake
was specific to C4-2B (PSA-expressing) cells, which agreed with the
cytotoxicity studies. This finding was confirmed by encapsulating
Dox-PSA prodrug into pH-sensitive liposomes to enable prodrug intracellular
release, followed by its enzymatic activation. Interestingly, our
results demonstrated that Dox-PSA loaded into pH-responsive nanoparticles
exhibited cytotoxicity comparable to free prodrug in C4-2B monolayers,
with superior activity in tumor spheroids, due to deeper penetration
within tumor spheroids. Our approach could open the doors for novel
Dox-PSA nanomedicines with higher safety and efficacy to treat advanced
and metastatic prostate cancer.