posted on 2021-03-18, 17:37authored byMiguel Gisbert-Garzarán, Daniel Lozano, Kotaro Matsumoto, Aoi Komatsu, Miguel Manzano, Fuyuhiko Tamanoi, María Vallet-Regí
The several biological
barriers that nanoparticles might encounter
when administered to a patient constitute the major bottleneck of
nanoparticle-mediated tumor drug delivery, preventing their successful
translation into the clinic and reducing their therapeutic profile.
In this work, mesoporous silica nanoparticles have been employed as
a platform to engineer a versatile nanomedicine able to address such
barriers, achieving (a) excessive premature drug release control,
(b) accumulation in tumor tissues, (c) selective internalization in
tumoral cells, and (d) endosomal escape. The nanoparticles have been
decorated with a self-immolative redox-responsive linker to prevent
excessive premature release, to which a versatile and polyvalent peptide
that is able to recognize tumoral cells and induce the delivery of
the nanoparticles to the cytoplasm via endosomal escape has been grafted.
The excellent biological performance of the carrier has been demonstrated
using 2D and 3D in vitro cell cultures and a tumor-bearing
chicken embryo model, demonstrating in all cases high biocompatibility
and cytotoxic effect, efficient endosomal escape and tumor penetration,
and accumulation in tumors grown on the chorioallantoic membrane of
chicken embryos.