Engineering a Nanostructured Nucleolin-Binding Peptide for Intracellular Drug Delivery in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Stem Cells.
Mireia PesarrodonaLaura Sánchez-GarcíaJoaquin Seras-FranzosoAlejandro Sánchez-ChardiRicardo Baltá-FoixPatricia Cámara-SánchezPetra GenerJosé Juan JaraDaniel PulidoNaroa SernaSimó SchwartzMiriam RoyoAntonio VillaverdeIbane AbasoloEsther VazquezPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
Five peptide ligands of four different cell surface receptors (nucleolin, CXCR1, CMKLR1, and CD44v6) have been evaluated as targeting moieties for triple-negative human breast cancers. Among them, the peptide F3, derived from phage display, promotes the fast and efficient internalization of a genetically fused green fluorescent protein (GFP) inside MDA-MB-231 cancer stem cells in a specific receptor-dependent fashion. The further engineering of this protein into the modular construct F3-RK-GFP-H6 and the subsequent construct F3-RK-PE24-H6 resulted in self-assembling polypeptides that organize as discrete and regular nanoparticles. These materials, 15-20 nm in size, show enhanced nucleolin-dependent cell penetrability. We show that the F3-RK-PE24-H6, based on the Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A (PE24) as a core functional domain, is highly cytotoxic over target cells. The combination of F3, the cationic peptide (RK)n, and the toxin domain PE24 in such unusual presentation appears as a promising approach to cell-targeted drug carriers in breast cancers and addresses selective drug delivery in otherwise difficult-to-treat triple-negative breast cancers.
Keyphrases
- cancer stem cells
- drug delivery
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- cancer therapy
- single cell
- cell surface
- escherichia coli
- endothelial cells
- binding protein
- cell therapy
- cell cycle arrest
- induced apoptosis
- protein protein
- amino acid
- quantum dots
- drug release
- biofilm formation
- small molecule
- young adults
- oxidative stress
- staphylococcus aureus
- mesenchymal stem cells
- living cells
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell proliferation
- single molecule