Litcius/Paper detail

Dynamically Deformable Protein Delivery Strategy Disassembles Neutrophil Extracellular Traps to Prevent Liver Metastasis

Lianghan Zhu, Zhaoting Li, Ning Liu, Honghao Sun, Yixin Wang, Minjie Sun

2021Advanced Functional Materials16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), consisting of chromatin DNA filaments coated with granule proteins, promote metastasis by enhancing tumor cell migration to distant organs. Recent studies indicate that NETs adhere to cancer cell membranes and enhance cell motility significantly to induce liver metastasis in patients with breast and colon cancers. Herein, a dynamically deformable protein delivery strategy is developed to prevent liver metastasis by disassembling NETs. Specifically, poly amino acid conjugating with polyethylene glycol (PAAP) is explored and synthesized for DNase‐1 delivery. Notably, PAAP/DNase‐1 degrades chromatin to induce apoptosis, followed by cell membrane rupture and remaining DNase‐1 releases to the extracellular. More importantly, the released DNase‐1 disassembles NET‐DNA to prevent liver metastasis induced by NET. In all, PAAP/DNase‐1 treatment not only suppresses tumor growth by degrading intracellular chromatin, but also prevents the liver metastasis by disassembling the NET‐NDA. This strategy may provide brand‐new inspiration to prevent the liver metastasis fundamentally in patients with metastatic colon and breast cancer.

Topics & Concepts

MetastasisNeutrophil extracellular trapsChromatinExtracellularBiologyCell biologyCancer cellIntracellularCancer researchPronaseCancerImmunologyDNABiochemistryEnzymeInflammationTrypsinGeneticsNeutrophil, Myeloperoxidase and Oxidative MechanismsImmune cells in cancerNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics