Litcius/Paper detail

iRGD-Guided Silica/Gold Nanoparticles for Efficient Tumor-Targeting and Enhancing Antitumor Efficacy Against Breast Cancer

Xuefeng Hou, Qi Chen, Ying Fang, Li Zhang, Shuoheng Huang, Minjie Xu, Yaning Ren, Zhansen Shi, Yan Wei, Lihua Li

2024International Journal of Nanomedicine12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Breast cancer presents significant challenges due to the limited effectiveness of available treatments and the high likelihood of recurrence. iRGD possesses both RGD sequence and C-terminal sequence and has dual functions of targeting and membrane penetration. iRGD-modified nanocarriers can enhance drug targeting of tumor vascular endothelial cells and penetration of new microvessels, increasing drug concentration in tumor tissues. Methods: /AuNCs-iRGD/PTX, SAIP@NPs). The assessment encompassed the characterization of the morphology, particle size distribution, physicochemical properties, in vitro release profile, cytotoxicity, and cellular uptake of SAIP@NPs. The tumor targeting and anti-tumor efficacy of SAIP@NPs were assessed using a small animal in vivo imaging system and a tumor-bearing nude mice model, respectively. The tumor targeting and anti-tumor efficacy of SAIP@NPs were assessed utilizing a small animal in vivo imaging system and an in situ nude mice breast cancer xenograft model, respectively. Results: The prepared SAIP@NPs exhibited decent stability and a certain slow-release effect in phosphate buffer (PBS, pH 7.4). In vitro studies had shown that, due to the dual functions of transmembrane and targeting of iRGD peptide, SAIP@NPs exhibited strong binding to integrin αvβ3, which was highly expressed on the membrane of MDA-MB-231 cells, improving the uptake capacity of tumor cells, inhibiting the rapid growth of tumor cells, and promoting tumor cell apoptosis. The results of animal experiments further proved that SAIP@NPs had longer residence time in tumor sites, stronger anti-tumor effect, and no obvious toxicity to major organs of experimental animals. Conclusion: The engineered SAIP@NPs exhibited superior functionalities including efficient membrane permeability, precise tumor targeting, and imaging, thereby significantly augmenting the therapeutic efficacy against breast cancer with a favorable safety profile.

Topics & Concepts

Breast cancerColloidal goldNanoparticleMaterials scienceNanotechnologyCancer researchCancerMedicineInternal medicineNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsCell Adhesion Molecules Research