Apolipoprotein E Peptide-Directed Chimeric Polymersomes Mediate an Ultrahigh-Efficiency Targeted Protein Therapy for Glioblastoma.
Yu JiangJian ZhangFenghua MengZhiyuan ZhongPublished in: ACS nano (2018)
The inability to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) prevents nearly all chemotherapeutics and biotherapeutics from the effective treatment of brain tumors, rendering few improvements in patient survival rates to date. Here, we report that apolipoprotein E peptide [ApoE, (LRKLRKRLL)2C] specifically binds to low-density lipoprotein receptor members (LDLRs) and mediates superb BBB crossing and highly efficient glioblastoma (GBM)-targeted protein therapy in vivo. The in vitro BBB model studies reveal that ApoE induces 2.2-fold better penetration of the immortalized mouse brain endothelial cell line (bEnd.3) monolayer for chimeric polymersomes (CP) compared to Angiopep-2, the best-known BBB-crossing peptide used in clinical trials for GBM therapy. ApoE-installed CP (ApoE-CP) carrying saporin (SAP) displays a highly specific and potent antitumor effect toward U-87 MG cells with a low half-maximum inhibitory concentration of 14.2 nM SAP. Notably, ApoE-CP shows efficient BBB crossing as well as accumulation and penetration in orthotopic U-87 MG glioblastoma. The systemic administration of SAP-loaded ApoE-CP causes complete growth inhibition of orthotopic U-87 MG GBM without eliciting any observable adverse effects, affording markedly improved survival benefits. ApoE peptide provides an ultrahigh-efficiency targeting strategy for GBM therapy.
Keyphrases
- cognitive decline
- blood brain barrier
- high fat diet
- highly efficient
- cancer therapy
- clinical trial
- cell therapy
- mild cognitive impairment
- drug delivery
- randomized controlled trial
- induced apoptosis
- stem cells
- binding protein
- single cell
- free survival
- photodynamic therapy
- genome wide
- mesenchymal stem cells
- signaling pathway
- study protocol
- oxidative stress
- bone marrow
- endoplasmic reticulum stress