Litcius/Paper detail

Specific Endothelial Cells Govern Nanoparticle Entry into Solid Tumors

Benjamin R. Kingston, Zachary P. Lin, Ben Ouyang, Presley MacMillan, Jessica Ngai, Abdullah M. Syed, Shrey Sindhwani, Warren C. W. Chan

2021ACS Nano128 citationsDOI

Abstract

The successful delivery of nanoparticles to solid tumors depends on their ability to pass through blood vessels and into the tumor microenvironment. Here, we discovered a subset of tumor endothelial cells that facilitate nanoparticle transport into solid tumors. We named these cells nanoparticle transport endothelial cells (N-TECs). We show that only 21% of tumor endothelial cells located on a small number of vessels are involved in transporting nanoparticles into the tumor microenvironment. N-TECs have an increased expression of genes related to nanoparticle transport and vessel permeability compared to other tumor endothelial cells. The N-TECs act as gatekeepers that determine the entry point, distribution, cell accessibility, and number of nanoparticles that enter the tumor microenvironment.

Topics & Concepts

Tumor microenvironmentNanoparticleEndothelial stem cellCancer researchTumor cellsCell biologyChemistryNanotechnologyMaterials scienceBiophysicsMedicineBiologyIn vitroBiochemistryExtracellular vesicles in diseaseNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics