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Tyrosine kinase inhibitor conjugated quantum dots for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treatment

Authors :
Sabesan Yoganathan
Nishant S. Kulkarni
Jeanette C. Perron
Aaron Muth
Leonard Barasa
Vineela Parvathaneni
Vivek Gupta
Snehal K. Shukla
Source :
European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. 133:145-159
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Non-small cell lung cancer is a major sub-type of lung cancer that is associated with a poor diagnosis resulting in poor therapy for the disorder. In order to achieve a better prognosis, innovative multi-functional systems need to be developed which will aide in diagnosis as well as therapy for the disorder. One such multi-functional delivery system fabricated is Quantum Dots (QDs). QDs are photo-luminescent inorganic nanoparticles utilized for tumor detection, preclinically. Erlotinib hydrochloride, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, is a first-generation drug developed to treat NSCLC. Its active metabolite, Desmethyl Erlotinib (OSI-420), exhibits similar anticancer activity as erlotinib. OSI-420 was conjugated to QDs to fabricate a delivery system and was then characterized by FT-IR, H NMR, UV-VIS, particle size, zeta potential, fluorescence spectroscopy and TEM. Drug loading was estimated using UV-VIS spectroscopy (52.2 ± 7.5%). A concentration-dependent release of OSI-420 was achieved using esterase enzymes, which was further confirmed using LC-MS. A cellular uptake study revealed the internalization potential of QDs and QD-OSI 420. A cellular recovery study was performed to confirm the internalization potential. Cell viability studies revealed that QD-OSI 420 conjugates had significantly better efficacy than pure drugs in all tested cell lines. QD conjugated OSI-420 demonstrated an IC60 of 2.5 μM in erlotinib-resistant A549 cell lines, where erlotinib or OSI-420 alone could not exhibit 60% inhibition when evaluated up to 20 μM. Similar cytotoxic enhancement of erlotinib was seen with QD-OSI 420 in other NSCLC cell lines as well. These results were strengthened by 3D-SCC model of A549 which revealed that QD-OSI 420 was significantly better in reducing in-vitro 3D tumor volume, as compared to pure drugs. This study, being one of its kind, explores the feasibility of conjugating OSI-420 with QDs as an alternative to traditional anti-cancer therapy, by improving intracellular drug delivery.

Details

ISSN :
09280987
Volume :
133
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e075579b7ca7ed24761bc89d23e96439
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2019.03.026