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Reactive oxygen species-activatable self-amplifying Watson-Crick base pairing-inspired supramolecular nanoprodrug for tumor-specific therapy.

Authors :
Xu, Xiaoyu
Zeng, Zishan
Ding, Xin
Shan, Ting
Liu, Qiuxing
Chen, Meixu
Chen, Jie
Xia, Meng
He, Yuanfeng
Huang, Zeqian
Huang, Yanjuan
Zhao, Chunshun
Source :
Biomaterials. Oct2021, Vol. 277, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Intratumoral upregulated reactive oxygen species (ROS) has been extensively exploited as exclusive stimulus to activate drug release for tumor-specific therapy. However, insufficient endogenous ROS and tumor heterogeneity severely restrict clinical translation of current ROS-responsive drug delivery systems. Herein, a tailored ROS-activatable self-amplifying supramolecular nanoprodrug was developed for reinforced ROS-responsiveness and highly selective antitumor therapy. A novel ROS-cleavable CA-based thioacetal linker CASOH was synthesized with ROS generator cinnamaldehyde (CA) incorporated into its molecular structure, to skillfully realize self-amplifying positive feedback loop of "ROS-activated CA release with CA-induced ROS regeneration". CASOH was modified with a cytosine analogue gemcitabine (GEM) to obtain ROS-activatable self-immolative prodrug CAG, which could be selectively activated in tumor cells and further achieve self-boosting "snowballing" activation via ROS compensation, while keep inactive in normal cells. Through Watson-Crick nucleobase pairing (G≡C)-like hydrogen bonds, CAG efficiently crosslinked with a matched guanine-rich acyclovir-modified hyaluronic acid conjugate HA-ACV, to self-assemble into pH/ROS dual-responsive supramolecular nanoprodrug HCAG. With high stability, beneficial tumor targeting capacity and pH/ROS-responsiveness, HCAG nanoformulation exhibited remarkable in vivo antitumor efficacy with minimal systemic toxicity. Based on unique tumor-specific self-amplifying prodrug activation and Watson-Crick base pairing-inspired supramolecular self-assembly, this study provides an inspirational strategy of exploiting novel ROS-responsive nanoplatform with reinforced responsiveness and specificity for future clinical translation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01429612
Volume :
277
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biomaterials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152631062
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2021.121128