Genetically engineered nano-melittin vesicles for multimodal synergetic cancer therapy.
Jianzhong ZhangXue LiuYutian XiaShuyu XuXuan LiuHaiqing XiaoXiaoyong WangChao LiuGang LiuPublished in: Bioengineering & translational medicine (2023)
Melittin, the principal constituent in bee venom, is an attractive candidate for cancer therapy. However, its clinical applications are limited by hemolysis, nonspecific cytotoxicity, and rapid metabolism. Herein, a novel genetically engineered vesicular antibody-melittin (VAM) drug delivery platform was proposed and validated for targeted cancer combination therapy. VAM generated from the cellular plasma membrane was bio-synthetically fabricated, with the recombinant protein (hGC33 scFv-melittin) being harbored and displayed on the cell membrane. The bioactive and targetable nanomelittin conjugated by hGC33 scFv could be released in an MMP14-responsive manner at tumor sites, which reduced off-target toxicity, especially the hemolytic activity of melittin. Importantly, VAM could be loaded with small-molecule drugs or nanoparticles for combination therapy. Nanomelittin formed pores in membranes and disturbed phospholipid bilayers, which allowed the anticancer agents (i.e., chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin and sonosensitizer purpurin 18 nanoparticles) co-delivered by VAM to penetrate deeper tumor sites, leading to synergistic therapeutic effects. In particular, the punching effect generated by sonodynamic therapy further improved the immunomodulatory effect of nanomelittin to activate the immune response. Taken together, our findings indicate that clinically translatable VAM-based strategies represent a universal, promising approach to multimodal synergetic cancer therapy.
Keyphrases
- cancer therapy
- combination therapy
- drug delivery
- small molecule
- immune response
- protein protein
- drug release
- pain management
- emergency department
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell carcinoma
- molecular dynamics simulations
- oxidative stress
- high throughput
- squamous cell
- photodynamic therapy
- dendritic cells
- chronic pain
- toll like receptor
- cell migration
- red blood cell
- single cell
- drug induced
- adverse drug
- bone marrow