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Tumor Microenvironment-Activated and Viral-Mimicking Nanodrugs Driven by Molecular Precise Recognition for dNTP Inhibition-Induced Synergistic Cancer Therapy.

Fanfan WangZhongxiong FanQixin ZhuHaina TianJunyu YaoBeili JiangFukai ZhuGuanghao SuZhenqing HouShefang YeYang Li
Published in: ACS biomaterials science & engineering (2019)
The medical application of nanotechnology is promising for cancer chemotherapy. However, most of the small-molecule drug assemblies still have such disadvantages as serious drug leakage and nonideal synergistic mechanisms, resulting in undesired therapeutic effect. Both nucleoside analogue-based clofarabine (CA) and methotrexate (MTX) were used as the first-line anticancer medication. However, a single-agent chemotherapy still faced many challenges including low bioavailability and toxic side effects to normal tissues due to nonspecific biodistribution of drugs. Herein, we designed and fabricated novel viral-mimicking and carry-free nanodrugs (CA-MTX NPs) via molecular recognition-driven precise self-assembly between CA and MTX. After introduction of mild acid-responsive PEG-lipid on the surface of CA-MTX NPs, the synthetic nanodrugs with a diameter of ∼150 nm exhibited tumor microenvironment-activated characteristics and self-targeting property. The results suggested that our nanodrugs could achieve superior tumor accumulation and synergistically promote the tumor suppression by collaboratively inhibiting dNTP pools. We foresaw that the well-designed smart nanodrugs delivery system would open a new avenue in synergistic cancer therapeutics.
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