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cRGD-modified nanoparticles of multi-bioactive agent conjugate with pH-sensitive linkers and PD-L1 antagonist for integrative collaborative treatment of breast cancer.

Chenming ZouYuepeng TangPing ZengDerong CuiMajdi Al AmiliYa ChangZhu JinYuanyuan ShenSongwei TanShengrong Guo
Published in: Nanoscale horizons (2023)
Targeted co-delivery and co-release of multi-drugs is essential to have an integrative collaborative effect on treating cancer. It is valuable to use few drug carriers for multi-drug delivery. Herein, we develop cRGD-modified nanoparticles (cRGD-TDA) of a conjugate of doxorubicin as cytotoxic agent, adjudin as an anti-metastasis agent and D-α-tocopherol polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate (TPGS) as a reactive oxygen species inducer linked with pH-sensitive bonds, and then combine the nanoparticles with PD-L1 antagonist to treat 4T1 triple-negative breast cancer. cRGD-TDA NPs present tumor-targeted co-delivery and pH-sensitive co-release of triple agents. cRGD-TDA NPs combined with PD-L1 antagonist much more significantly inhibit tumor growth and metastasis than single-drug treatment, which is due to their integrative collaborative effect. It is found that TPGS elicits a powerful immunogenic cell death effect. Meanwhile, PD-L1 antagonist mitigates the immunosuppressive environment and has a synergistic effect with the cRGD-TDA NPs. The study provides a new strategy to treat refractory cancer integratively and collaboratively.
Keyphrases
  • cancer therapy
  • drug delivery
  • cell death
  • papillary thyroid
  • reactive oxygen species
  • emergency department
  • network analysis
  • combination therapy
  • cell proliferation
  • drug induced
  • young adults
  • squamous cell