Self-Assembly of
a Linear–Dendritic Polymer
Containing Cisplatin and Norcantharidin into Raspberry-like Multimicelle
Clusters for the Efficient
Chemotherapy of Liver Cancer
posted on 2023-03-08, 05:14authored byMingli Wei, Ying Jiang, Rong Sun, Liangyi Fang, Chenxiao Chu, Haibing He, Jingxin Gou, Tian Yin, Yongbo Song, Xing Tang, Fan Zhao, Yinglei Zhai, Yu Zhang
Combination chemotherapy has been proved to be an effective
strategy
in the clinic, and nanoformulations have drawn much attention in the
field of drug delivery. However, conventional nanocarriers suffer
from shortcomings such as inefficient coloading and undesired molar
ratios of the combined drugs, preleakage of cargos during systemic
circulation, and lack of cancer-selective drug release. To achieve
tumor-specific codelivery of cisplatin (CDDP) and norcantharidin (NCTD)
for synergistic treatment of liver cancer, a novel linear–dendritic
polymer, termed as G1(PPDC)x, was designed
and synthesized, where a prodrug consisting of cisplatin (CDDP) and
norcantharidin (NCTD) was conjugated to PEG2000 via ester bonds to fabricate linear polymer–drug conjugates,
and the conjugates were subsequently grafted to the terminal hydroxyls
of a dendritic polycarbonate core. Benefiting from the hydrogen bond
interactions, G1(PPDC)x could spontaneously
self-assemble into a unique type of raspberry-like multimicelle clusters
in solution (G1(PPDC)x-PMs). G1(PPDC)x-PMs possessed an optimal synergistic ratio
of CDDP and NCTD, without obvious premature release or disassembly
in biological environments. Intriguingly, upon extravasation into
the interstitial tumor tissues, G1(PPDC)x-PMs (132 nm in diameter) could disassemble and reassemble into smaller
micelles (40 nm in diameter) in response to the mildly acidic tumor
microenvironment, which would enhance the deep tumor penetration and
cellular accumulation of drugs. In vivo delivery
of G1(PPDC)x-PMs led to a significantly
prolonged blood circulation half-life, which is beneficial to achieve
sufficient tumor accumulation through the enhanced permeability and
retention (EPR) effect. G1(PPDC)x-PMs
displayed the best antitumor activity in H22 tumor-bearing mice with
a tumor inhibition rate of 78.87%. Meanwhile, G1(PPDC)x-PMs alleviated both myelosuppression toxicities
of CDDP and vascular irritation of NCTD. Our results demonstrated
that G1(PPDC)x-PMs could serve as an effective
drug delivery system for codelivery of CDDP and NCTD to treat liver
cancer efficiently.