Aptamer-Gemcitabine Conjugates with Enzymatically Cleavable Linker for Targeted Delivery and Intracellular Drug Release in Cancer Cells.
Jianjun QiZihua ZengZhenghu ChenCole NipperXiaohui LiuQuanyuan WanJian ChenChing-Hsuan TungYouli ZuPublished in: Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Gemcitabine is a chemotherapeutic used clinically to treat a variety of cancers. However, because it lacks tumor cell specificity, gemcitabine may cause off-target cytotoxicity and adversely impact patients. To impart cancer cell specificity to gemcitabine and improve its therapeutic efficacy, we synthesized a unique aptamer-drug conjugate that carries a high gemcitabine payload (three molecules) via a dendrimer structure and enzymatically cleavable linkers for controlled intracellular drug release. First, linker-gemcitabinedendrimer-linker-gemcitabine products were produced, which had significantly lower cytotoxicity than an equimolar amount of free drug. Biochemical analysis revealed that lysosomal cathepsin B protease rapidly cleaved the dendritic linkers and released the conjugated gemcitabine as a free drug. Subsequently, the dendrimer-linker-gemcitabine was coupled with a cell-specific aptamer to form aptamer-gemcitabine conjugates. Functional assays confirmed that, under aptamer guidance, aptamer-gemcitabine conjugates were selectively bound to and then internalized by triple-negative breast cancer cells. Cellular therapy studies indicated that the aptamer-gemcitabine conjugates potentiated cytotoxic activity to targeted cancer cells but did not affect off-target control cells. Our study demonstrates a novel approach to aptamer-mediated targeted drug delivery that combines a high drug payload and an enzymatically controlled drug release switch to achieve higher therapeutic efficacy and fewer off-target effects relative to free-drug chemotherapy.
Keyphrases
- drug release
- locally advanced
- drug delivery
- gold nanoparticles
- cancer therapy
- sensitive detection
- magnetic nanoparticles
- rectal cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- single cell
- radiation therapy
- breast cancer cells
- emergency department
- ejection fraction
- photodynamic therapy
- stem cells
- oxidative stress
- reactive oxygen species
- newly diagnosed
- adverse drug
- young adults
- quantum dots
- chronic kidney disease
- electronic health record