Synergistic Therapy for Cervical Cancer by Codelivery of Cisplatin and JQ1 Inhibiting Plk1-Mutant Trp53 Axis.
Yinan WangNa ShenShuchun LiHaiyang YuYue WangZhilin LiuLiying HanZhaohui TangPublished in: Nano letters (2021)
JQ1, a specific inhibitor of bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4), could have great potential in the treatment of cervical cancer. However, its clinical application is limited by its short plasma half-life and limited antitumor efficacy. In this work, cisplatin (CDDP) was first utilized as the stabilizer and cooperator in the nanosystem (mPEG113-b-P(Glu10-co-Phe10)-CDDP/JQ1, called PGP-CDDP/JQ1) to break through the efficiency limitation of JQ1. The PGP-CDDP/JQ1 had a combination index (CI) of 0.21, exerting a strong cytotoxic synergistic effect. In vivo experiments revealed that PGP-CDDP/JQ1 had a significantly higher tumor inhibition effect (tumor inhibition rate: 85% vs 14%) and plasma stability of JQ1 (area under the curve (AUC0-∞): 335.97 vs 16.88 μg × h/mL) than free JQ1. The mechanism underling the synergism of JQ1 with CDDP in PGP-CDDP/JQ1 was uncovered to be inhibiting Plk1-mutant Trp53 axis. Thus, this study provides an optional method for improving the clinical application of JQ1 in cervical cancer.