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Active Targeting of Cancer Cells by Nanobody Decorated Polypeptide Micelle with Bio-orthogonally Conjugated Drug.
Costa, Simone A; Mozhdehi, Davoud; Dzuricky, Michael J; Isaacs, Farren J; Brustad, Eric M; Chilkoti, Ashutosh.
Affiliation
  • Costa SA; Department of Biomedical Engineering , Duke University , Durham , North Carolina 27708 , United States.
  • Mozhdehi D; Department of Biomedical Engineering , Duke University , Durham , North Carolina 27708 , United States.
  • Dzuricky MJ; Department of Biomedical Engineering , Duke University , Durham , North Carolina 27708 , United States.
  • Isaacs FJ; Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology , Yale University , New Haven , Connecticut 06520 , United States.
  • Brustad EM; Department of Chemistry , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill , North Carolina 27599 , United States.
  • Chilkoti A; Department of Biomedical Engineering , Duke University , Durham , North Carolina 27708 , United States.
Nano Lett ; 19(1): 247-254, 2019 01 09.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30540482
ABSTRACT
Polypeptides are promising carriers for chemotherapeutics they have minimal toxicity, can be recombinantly synthesized with precise control over molecular weight, and enhance drug pharmacokinetics as self-assembled nanoparticles. Polypeptide-based systems also provide the ability to achieve active targeting with genetically encoded targeting ligands. While passive targeting promotes accumulation of nanocarriers in solid tumors, active targeting provides an additional layer of tunable control and widens the therapeutic window. However, fusion of most targeting proteins to polypeptide carriers exposes the limitations of this

approach:

the residues that are used for drug attachment are also promiscuously distributed on protein surfaces. We present here a universal methodology to solve this problem by the site-specific attachment of extrinsic moieties to polypeptide drug delivery systems without cross-reactivity to fused targeting domains. We incorporate an unnatural amino acid, p-acetylphenylalanine, to provide a biorthogonal ketone for attachment of doxorubicin in the presence of reactive amino acids in a nanobody-targeted, elastin-like polypeptide nanoparticle. These nanoparticles exhibit significantly greater cytotoxicity than nontargeted controls in multiple cancer cell lines.
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Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Peptides / Drug Delivery Systems / Nanoparticles / Neoplasms Limits: Animals / Humans Language: En Journal: Nano Lett Year: 2019 Type: Article Affiliation country: United States

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Peptides / Drug Delivery Systems / Nanoparticles / Neoplasms Limits: Animals / Humans Language: En Journal: Nano Lett Year: 2019 Type: Article Affiliation country: United States