ATP-triggered anticancer drug delivery
TL;DR: This ATP-triggered drug release system provides a more sophisticated drug delivery system, which can differentiate ATP levels to facilitate the selective release of drugs.
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Abstract: Stimuli-triggered drug delivery systems have been increasingly used to promote physiological specificity and on-demand therapeutic efficacy of anticancer drugs. Here we utilize adenosine-5'-triphosphate (ATP) as a trigger for the controlled release of anticancer drugs. We demonstrate that polymeric nanocarriers functionalized with an ATP-binding aptamer-incorporated DNA motif can selectively release the intercalating doxorubicin via a conformational switch when in an ATP-rich environment. The half-maximal inhibitory concentration of ATP-responsive nanovehicles is 0.24 μM in MDA-MB-231 cells, a 3.6-fold increase in the cytotoxicity compared with that of non-ATP-responsive nanovehicles. Equipped with an outer shell crosslinked by hyaluronic acid, a specific tumour-targeting ligand, the ATP-responsive nanocarriers present an improvement in the chemotherapeutic inhibition of tumour growth using xenograft MDA-MB-231 tumour-bearing mice. This ATP-triggered drug release system provides a more sophisticated drug delivery system, which can differentiate ATP levels to facilitate the selective release of drugs. Nanoparticles can deliver drugs to tumours but improvements in selectively targeting tumour cells are required. Here, Mo et al. develop nanocarriers that take advantage of high ATP levels in tumour cells and show that these nanoparticles encapsulating the chemotherapeutic doxorubicin can inhibit tumour growth in mice.
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Citations
A Cooperatively Activatable DNA Nanoprobe for Cancer Cell-Selective Imaging of ATP
Yizhuo Zhou,Lina Zou,Lina Zou,Gaiping Li,Gaiping Li,Tianhui Shi,Shuyi Yu,Fuan Wang,Xiaoqing Liu +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, a split aptamer/DNAzyme (aptazyme)-based DNA probe was designed for fluorescence detection of ATP and further developed a cooperatively activatable DNA nanoprobe for tumor-specific imaging of ATP in vivo.
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