Development of a multi-target peptide for potentiating chemotherapy by modulating tumor microenvironment.

2016 
Abstract Finding effective cures against aggressive malignancy remains a major challenge in cancer chemotherapy. Here, we report a “tadpole”-like peptide by covalently conjugating the alanine-alanine-asparagine “tail” residual to the cyclic tumor homing peptide iRGD (CCRGDKGPDC) to afford nRGD, which significantly enhanced tumoricidal effects of doxorubicin, by either co-administered as a physical mixture or as a targeting ligand covalently conjugated to the liposomal carrier. Given twice at an equivalent dose of 5 mg/kg, doxorubicin loaded liposomes modified with nRGD (nRGD-Lipo-Dox) showed excellent antitumor efficacy in 4T1 breast cancer mice, of which 44.4% remained alive for over 90 days without recurrence during the period of investigation. The dramatic improvement in antitumor efficacy was attributed to nRGD-Lipo-Dox which appeared to specifically interact with tumor vascular endothelial cells to achieve efficient tumor penetration, and modulate tumor microenvironment with depletion of tumor associated macrophages.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    55
    References
    64
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []