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Bioengineered Macrophages Can Responsively Transform into Nanovesicles To Target Lung Metastasis.

Haiqiang CaoHong WangXinyu HeTao TanHaiyan HuZhiwan WangJing WangJie LiZhiwen ZhangYaping Li
Published in: Nano letters (2018)
Specific drug delivery to metastatic tumors remains a great challenge for antimetastasis therapy. We herein report a bioengineered macrophage-based delivery system (LD-MDS) that can be preferentially delivered to lung metastases and intelligently transformed into nanovesicles and secondary nanovesicles for antimetastasis therapy. LD-MDS was prepared by anchoring a legumain-specific propeptide of melittin (legM) and cytotoxic soravtansine (DM4) prodrug onto the membrane of living macrophages. LD-MDS is responsively activated by legumain protease and converted into DM4-loaded exosome-like nanovesicles (DENs), facilitating efficient internalization by metastatic 4T1 cancer cells and considerable cell death. Afterward, the damaged 4T1 cells can release secondary nanovesicles and free drug molecules to destroy neighboring cancer cells. In vivo, LD-MDS displays superior targeting efficiency for lung metastatic lesions with diameters less than 100 μm and remarkably inhibits lung metastasis. This study provides a new opportunity to explore endogenous macrophages as living drug delivery vehicles with controlled drug release to target metastatic lung tumors.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • drug release
  • cancer therapy
  • small cell lung cancer
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • cell death
  • type diabetes
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • stem cells
  • bone marrow
  • signaling pathway
  • smoking cessation
  • cell therapy