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Supramolecular Nanofibers of Drug-Peptide Amphiphile and Affibody Suppress HER2+ Tumor Growth.

Chunhui LiangLushuai ZhangWene ZhaoLinlin XuYaoxia ChenJiafu LongFuqiang WangLing WangZhuhong Zhang
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2018)
Antibody-based medicines and nanomedicines are very promising for cancer therapy due to the high specificity and efficacy of antibodies. However, antibody-drug conjugates and antibody-modified nanomaterials frequently suffer from low drug loading and loss of functions due to the covalent modification of the antibody. A novel and versatile strategy to prepare supramolecular nanomaterials by the coassembly of an affibody (antiHER2) and drug-peptide amphiphiles is reported here. During the enzyme-instructed self-assembly process, the drug-peptide amphiphile can coassemble with the affibody, resulting in supramolecular nanofibers in hydrogels. The drug loading in the supramolecular nanofibers is high (>30 wt%), and the stability of antiHER2 is significantly improved in the nanofibers at 37 °C (>15 d in vitro). The supramolecular nanofibers exhibit high affinity for HER2+ cancer cells and can be efficiently taken up by these cells. In a mouse tumor model, the supramolecular nanofibers abolish HER2+ NCI-N87 tumor growth due to the good accumulation and retention of nanofibers in tumor. This study provides a novel strategy to prepare nanomedicines with high drug loading and high specificity.
Keyphrases
  • cancer therapy
  • energy transfer
  • adverse drug
  • drug delivery
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • extracellular matrix
  • pi k akt
  • electronic health record