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Co-Delivery of Doxorubicin and Anti-PD-L1 Peptide in Lipid/PLGA Nanocomplexes for the Chemo-Immunotherapy of Cancer

Nan Zhang, Jing Li, Wenxia Gao, Wangwei Zhu, Jianqin Yan, Ziyun He, Li Li, Fang Wu, Yuji Pu, Bin He

2022Molecular Pharmaceutics26 citationsDOI

Abstract

The combined delivery of chemotherapeutics with checkpoint inhibitors of the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway provides a new approach for cancer treatment. Small-molecule peptide inhibitors possess short production cycle, low immunogenicity, and fewer side effects; however, their potential in cancer therapy is hampered by the rapid biodegradation and a nanocarrier is needed for efficient drug delivery. Herein, anticancer drug doxorubicin (DOX) and PD-L1 inhibitor peptide P-12 are co-loaded by a lipid polymer nanocomplex based on poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) and DSPE-PEG. Octaarginine (R8)-conjugated DSPE-PEG renders the LPN efficient internalization by cancer cells. The optimal nanomedicine LPN-30-R82K@DP shows a diameter of 125 nm and a DOX and P-12 loading content of 5.0 and 6.2%, respectively. LPN-30-R82K@DP exhibits good physiological stability and enhanced cellular uptake by cancer cells. It successfully induces immunogenic cell death and PD-L1 blockade in CT26 cancer cells. The in vivo antitumor study further suggests that co-loaded nanomedicine efficiently suppresses CT26 tumor growth and elicits antitumor immune response. This study manifests that lipid polymer nanocomplexes are promising drug carriers for the efficient chemo-immunotherapy of cancer.

Topics & Concepts

DoxorubicinNanocarriersNanomedicineCancer cellChemistryPLGAImmunogenicityCancer researchCancer immunotherapyCancerDrug deliveryInternalizationPharmacologyIn vivoImmunotherapyDrugImmune systemIn vitroChemotherapyMedicineBiochemistryCellMaterials scienceNanotechnologyImmunologyNanoparticleBiologyInternal medicineBiotechnologyOrganic chemistryNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryCancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers
Co-Delivery of Doxorubicin and Anti-PD-L1 Peptide in Lipid/PLGA Nanocomplexes for the Chemo-Immunotherapy of Cancer | Litcius