Cancer-Cell-Membrane-Coated Nanoparticles with a Yolk–Shell Structure Augment Cancer Chemotherapy

Di Nie(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhuo Dai(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jialin Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yiwei Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ziyue Xi(Shenyang Pharmaceutical University), Jie Wang(Shenyang Pharmaceutical University), Wei Zhang(Shenyang Pharmaceutical University), Kun Qian(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shiyan Guo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chunliu Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Rui Wang(Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine), Yiming Li(Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine), Miaorong Yu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xinxin Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xinghua Shi(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yong Gan(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Nano Letters
November 1, 2019
Cited by 227

Abstract

Despite rapid advancements in antitumor drug delivery, insufficient intracellular transport and subcellular drug accumulation are still issues to be addressed. Cancer cell membrane (CCM)-camouflaged nanoparticles (NPs) have shown promising potential in tumor therapy due to their immune escape and homotypic binding capacities. However, their efficacy is still limited due to inefficient tumor penetration and compromised intracellular transportation. Herein, a yolk–shell NP with a mesoporous silica nanoparticle (MSN)-supported PEGylated liposome yolk and CCM coating, CCM@LM, was developed for chemotherapy and exhibited a homologous tumor-targeting effect. The yolk–shell structure endowed CCM@LM with moderate rigidity, which might contribute to the frequent transformation into an ellipsoidal shape during infiltration, leading to facilitated penetration throughout multicellular spheroids in vitro (up to a 23.3-fold increase compared to the penetration of membrane vesicles). CCM@LM also exhibited a cellular invasion profile mimicking an enveloped virus invasion profile. CCM@LM was directly internalized by membrane fusion, and the PEGylated yolk (LM) was subsequently released into the cytosol, indicating the execution of an internalization pathway similar to that of an enveloped virus. The incoming PEGylated LM further underwent efficient trafficking throughout the cytoskeletal filament network, leading to enhanced perinuclear aggregation. Ultimately, CCM@LM, which co-encapsulated low-dose doxorubicin and the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor, mefuparib hydrochloride, exhibited a significantly stronger antitumor effect than the first-line chemotherapeutic drug Doxil. Our findings highlight that NPs that can undergo facilitated tumor penetration and robust intracellular trafficking have a promising future in cancer chemotherapy.


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