TY - JOUR
T1 - Protein-nanoparticle co-assembly supraparticles for drug delivery
T2 - Ultrahigh drug loading and colloidal stability, and instant and complete lysosomal drug release
AU - Xu, Zixing
AU - Lin, Huoyue
AU - Dai, Jie
AU - Wen, Xiaowei
AU - Yu, Xiaoya
AU - Xu, Can
AU - Ruan, Gang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024
PY - 2024/6/10
Y1 - 2024/6/10
N2 - Two frequent problems hindering clinical translation of nanomedicine are low drug loading and low colloidal stability. Previous efforts to achieve ultrahigh drug loading (>30 %) introduce new hurdles, including lower colloidal stability and others, for clinical translation. Herein, we report a new class of drug nano-carriers based on our recent finding in protein-nanoparticle co-assembly supraparticle (PNCAS), with both ultrahigh drug loading (58 % for doxorubicin, i.e., DOX) and ultrahigh colloidal stability (no significant change in hydrodynamic size after one year). We further show that our PNCAS-based drug nano-carrier possesses a built-in environment-responsive drug release feature: once in lysosomes, the loaded drug molecules are released instantly (<1 min) and completely (∼100 %). Our PNCAS-based drug delivery system is spontaneously formed by simple mixing of hydrophobic nanoparticles, albumin and drugs. Several issues related to industrial production are studied. The ultrahigh drug loading and stability of DOX-loaded PNCAS enabled the delivery of an exceptionally high dose of DOX into a mouse model of breast cancer, yielding high efficacy and no observed toxicity. With further developments, our PNCAS-based delivery systems could serve as a platform technology to meet the multiple requirements of clinical translation of nanomedicines.
AB - Two frequent problems hindering clinical translation of nanomedicine are low drug loading and low colloidal stability. Previous efforts to achieve ultrahigh drug loading (>30 %) introduce new hurdles, including lower colloidal stability and others, for clinical translation. Herein, we report a new class of drug nano-carriers based on our recent finding in protein-nanoparticle co-assembly supraparticle (PNCAS), with both ultrahigh drug loading (58 % for doxorubicin, i.e., DOX) and ultrahigh colloidal stability (no significant change in hydrodynamic size after one year). We further show that our PNCAS-based drug nano-carrier possesses a built-in environment-responsive drug release feature: once in lysosomes, the loaded drug molecules are released instantly (<1 min) and completely (∼100 %). Our PNCAS-based drug delivery system is spontaneously formed by simple mixing of hydrophobic nanoparticles, albumin and drugs. Several issues related to industrial production are studied. The ultrahigh drug loading and stability of DOX-loaded PNCAS enabled the delivery of an exceptionally high dose of DOX into a mouse model of breast cancer, yielding high efficacy and no observed toxicity. With further developments, our PNCAS-based delivery systems could serve as a platform technology to meet the multiple requirements of clinical translation of nanomedicines.
KW - Assembly
KW - Cancer
KW - Environment-responsive release
KW - Nanomedicine
KW - Production
KW - Translation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85193244174&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2024.124231
DO - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2024.124231
M3 - Article
C2 - 38759741
AN - SCOPUS:85193244174
SN - 0378-5173
VL - 658
JO - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
JF - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
M1 - 124231
ER -