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Manipulating Neovasculature-Targeting Capability of Biomimetic Nanodiscs for Synergistic Photoactivatable Tumor Infarction and Chemotherapy

Yunxue Xu, Renfa Liu, Rui Li, Xin Zhi, Peipei Yang, Linxue Qian, Desheng Sun, Li Liu, Zhifei Dai

2023ACS Nano21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Tumor infarction therapy is a promising antitumor strategy with the advantages of taking a short therapy duration, less risk of resistance, and effectiveness against a wide range of tumor types. However, its clinical application is largely hindered by tumor recurrence in the surviving rim and the potential risk of thromboembolic events due to nonspecific vasculature targeting. Herein, a neovasculature-targeting synthetic high-density lipoprotein (sHDL) nanodisc loaded with pyropheophorbide-a and camptothecin (CPN) was fabricated for photoactivatable tumor infarction and synergistic chemotherapy. By manipulating the anisotropy in ligand modification of sHDL nanodiscs, CPN modified with neovaculature-targeting peptide on the planes (PCPN) shows up to 7-fold higher cellular uptake compared with that around the edge (ECPN). PCPN can efficiently bind to endothelial cells of tumor vessels, and upon laser irradiation, massive local thrombus can be induced by the photodynamic reaction to deprive nutrition supply. Meanwhile, CPT could be released in response to the tumor reductive environment, thus killing residual tumor cells in the surviving rim to inhibit recurrence. These findings not only offer a powerful approach of synergistic cancer therapy but also suggest the potential of plane-modified sHDL nanodiscs as a versatile drug delivery nanocarrier.

Topics & Concepts

Cancer researchNanocarriersChemotherapyDrug deliveryChemistryMedicineBiophysicsNanotechnologyPharmacologyMaterials scienceBiologyInternal medicineNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsCancer, Lipids, and MetabolismExtracellular vesicles in disease
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