Cooperative nanomaterial system to sensitize, target, and treat tumors

Ji‐Ho Park(University of California San Diego), Geoffrey von Maltzahn(Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology), Mary Jue Xu(Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology), Valentina Fogal(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), Venkata Ramana Kotamraju(University of California, Santa Barbara), Erkki Ruoslahti(University of California, Santa Barbara), Sangeeta N. Bhatia(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Michael J. Sailor(University of California San Diego)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 28, 2009
Cited by 309Open Access
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Abstract

A significant barrier to the clinical translation of systemically administered therapeutic nanoparticles is their tendency to be removed from circulation by the mononuclear phagocyte system. The addition of a targeting ligand that selectively interacts with cancer cells can improve the therapeutic efficacy of nanomaterials, although these systems have met with only limited success. Here, we present a cooperative nanosystem consisting of two discrete nanomaterials. The first component is gold nanorod (NR) "activators" that populate the porous tumor vessels and act as photothermal antennas to specify tumor heating via remote near-infrared laser irradiation. We find that local tumor heating accelerates the recruitment of the second component: a targeted nanoparticle consisting of either magnetic nanoworms (NW) or doxorubicin-loaded liposomes (LP). The targeting species employed in this work is a cyclic nine-amino acid peptide LyP-1 (Cys-Gly-Asn-Lys-Arg-Thr-Arg-Gly-Cys) that binds to the stress-related protein, p32, which we find to be upregulated on the surface of tumor-associated cells upon thermal treatment. Mice containing xenografted MDA-MB-435 tumors that are treated with the combined NR/LyP-1LP therapeutic system display significant reductions in tumor volume compared with individual nanoparticles or untargeted cooperative system.


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