Elastin-like polypeptides (ELP) aggregate in response to mild hyperthermia, but remain soluble under normal physiological conditions. ELP macromolecules can accumulate in solid tumors because of the enhanced permeability and retention effect. Tumor retention of ELPs can be further enhanced through hyperthermia-induced aggregation of ELPs by local heating of the tumor. We evaluated the therapeutic potential of ELPs in delivering doxorubicin (Dox) in the E0771 syngeneic mouse breast cancer model. The ELP-Dox conjugate consisted of a cell penetrating peptide at the N-terminus and the 6-maleimidocaproyl hydrazone derivative of doxorubicin at the C-terminus of ELP. The acid-sensitive hydrazone linker ensured release of Dox in the lysosomes/endosomes after cellular uptake of the drug conjugate. ELP-Doxo dosed at 5 mg Dox equivalent/kg, extended the plasma half-life of Dox to 5.5 hours. Additionally, tumor uptake of ELP-Dox increased 2-fold when hyperthermia was applied, and was also enhanced compared to free Dox. Although high levels of Dox were found in the heart of animals treated with free Dox, no detectable levels of Dox were found in ELPDox treated animals indicating a correlation between tumor targeting and reduction of potential cardiac toxicity of ELP-Dox. At an optimal dose of 12 mg Dox equivalent/kg, ELP-Dox in combination with hyperthermia induced a complete tumor growth inhibition, which was distinctly superior to free drug which only moderately inhibited tumor growth. In summary, our findings demonstrate that thermal targeting of ELP increases the potency of doxorubicin underlying the potential of exploiting ELPs to enhance the therapeutic efficacy of conventional anticancer drugs.
Poor aqueous solubility limits the therapeutic index of paclitaxel as an anti-cancer drug. Synthesis of soluble prodrugs of paclitaxel, or conjugation of the drug to macromolecular carriers have been reported to increase its water-solubility. Macromolecular drug carriers have an added advantage of targeting the drug to the tumor site due to the abnormal tumor blood and lymphatic vasculature. This study describes a thermally responsive macromolecular carrier, elastin-like polypeptide (ELP) for the delivery of paclitaxel. Paclitaxel was bound to ELP by conjugation with the 6-maleimidocaproyl hydrazone derivative of paclitaxel, an acid-sensitive paclitaxel prodrug, for the potential treatment of breast cancer. Focused hyperthermia above a specific transition temperature at the site of a tumor causes ELP to aggregate and accumulate, thereby increasing the local concentration of the drug cargo. The paclitaxel prodrug described here bears an acid-sensitive linker that is cleavable at the lysosomal/endosomal pH, which allows a controlled intracellular release of the drug. The ELP-delivered paclitaxel in the presence of hyperthermia inhibits MCF-7 cell proliferation by stabilizing the microtubule structures, arresting the cells at the G2/M stage, and inducing apoptosis in a manner similar to conventional paclitaxel. It also inhibits proliferation of a paclitaxel resistant MCF-7 cell line. These data provide an in vitro proof of concept for the use of ELP as a delivery vehicle of paclitaxel.
Current treatment of solid tumors is limited by normal tissue tolerance, resulting in a narrow therapeutic index. To increase drug specificity and efficacy and to reduce toxicity in normal tissues, we have developed a polypeptide carrier for a cell cycle inhibitory peptide, which has the potential to be thermally targeted to the tumor site. The design of this polypeptide is based on elastin-like polypeptide (ELP). The coding sequence of ELP was modified by the addition of the cell penetrating peptide Bac-7 at the N-terminus and a 23 amino acid peptide derived from p21 at the C-terminus (Bac-ELP1-p21). Bac-ELP1-p21 is soluble in aqueous solutions below physiological temperature (37°C) but aggregates when the temperature is raised above 39°C, making it a promising thermally responsive therapeutic carrier that may be actively targeted to solid tumors by application of focused hyperthermia. While Bac-ELP1-p21 at 37°C did not have any effect on SKOV-3 cell proliferation, the use of hyperthermia increased the antiproliferative effect of Bac-ELP1-p21 compared with a thermally unresponsive control polypeptide. Bac-ELP1-p21 displayed both a cytoplasmic and nuclear distribution in the SKOV-3 cells, with nuclear-localized polypeptide enriched in the heated cells, as revealed by confocal microscopy. Using Western blotting, we show that Bac-ELP1-p21 caused a decrease in Rb phosphorylation levels in cells treated at 42°C. The polypeptide also induced caspase activation, PARP cleavage, and cell cycle arrest in S-phase and G2/M-phase. These studies indicate that ELP is a promising macromolecular carrier for the delivery of cell cycle inhibitory peptides to solid tumors.
Inhibition of cancer cell proliferation directly using peptides that arrest the cell cycle or induce apoptosis is a promising strategy. Peptides can be designed that interact very specifically with cyclins and/or cyclin-dependent kinases and with members of apoptotic cascades. Use of these peptides is not limited by their design, as a rational approach to peptide design is much less challenging than the design of small molecule inhibitors of specific protein-protein interactions. However, the limitations of peptide therapy lie in the poor pharmacokinetic properties of these large, often charged molecules. Therefore, overcoming the drug delivery hurdles could open the door for effective peptide therapy, thus making an entirely new class of molecules useful as anticancer drugs.
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