Combination therapy of two or more drugs has gradually become of outmost importance in cancer treatment. Cabazitaxel (CTX) is a taxoid drug and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a member of TNF superfamily. In this study, we prepared TRAIL-modified and CTX-loaded polymer micelle (TRAIL-M-CTX). This nanoparticle was self-assembled from biodegradable amphiphilic copolymers, monomethoxyl poly(ethylene glycol)-b-poly(DL-lactide) (mPEG-PLA) and COOH-PEG-PLA, via a nanoprecipitation method and were modified with the TRAIL protein, resulting in a particle size of 39.75 ± 0.17 nm in diameter and a drug encapsulation efficiency of 95.52 ± 1.69%. The successful coupling was confirmed by H NMR, FTIR spectroscopy, and DLS article size measurement. Pharmacodynamic analysis in two human cancer cell lines with different TRAIL sensitivities showed that TRAIL-M-CTX has a significantly better anticancer efficacy than the individual CTX and TRAIL protein. Importantly, TRAIL-M-CTX showed synergistic effects against TRAIL-insensitive cells (MCF-7). A study of cellular uptake implied that the modified micelles were internalized into MCF-7 cells more effectively than unmodified micelles, owing to the coupled TRAIL protein. A cell cycle assay of MCF-7 cells revealed that TRAIL-M-CTX significantly increased the sub-G1 population compared with CTX or TRIAL, thus, facilitating cancer cell apoptosis. These results suggest that TRAIL-M-CTX micelles have potential as a cancer chemotherapy formulation.
Cabazitaxel (CTX) is a second-generation semisynthetic taxane that demonstrates antitumor activity superior to docetaxel. However, the low aqueous solubility of CTX has hampered its use as a therapeutic agent. In this work, CTX-loaded N-t-butoxycarbonyl-L-phenylalanine end-capped monomethyl poly (ethylene glycol)-block-poly (D,L-lactide) (mPEG-PLA-Phe(Boc)/CTX) micelles were prepared to improve the solubility of CTX while retaining its superior stability before accessing the tumor site. The mPEG-PLA-Phe(Boc)/CTX micelles showed excellent stability in vitro compared with mPEG-PLA/CTX micelles. When stored at 25 °C, the mPEG-PLA/CTX micelles tended to aggregate within 1 h, whereas the mPEG-PLA-Phe(Boc)/CTX micelles were uniformly transparent even after three weeks. Dilution of mPEG-PLA/CTX micelles widened their size distribution and decreased the encapsulation efficiency, while significant change was not found in mPEG-PLA-Phe(Boc)/CTX micelles, even when diluted 1000-fold. Pharmacokinetic results in Sprague-Dawley rats indicated that, compared with Jevtana(®), intravenous administration of mPEG-PLA-Phe(Boc)/CTX micelles stably retained the CTX in plasma with 26.03-fold larger of the area under the time-concentration curve, 2.13-fold longer of the half-life, and 9.99-fold higher of the maximum concentration. In conclusion, mPEG-PLA-Phe(Boc) micelle may be a potential nanocarrier not only to improve the solubility of CTX but also to prolong the blood circulation time, which results in improved biological activity.
Novel type of multifunctional polymeric micelles (PMs) designated as HM-PMss/CTX micelles were developed in the present study for tumor-targeted and glutathione (GSH)-responsive delivery of cabazitaxel (CTX). The surface of the vehicles was modified with piloting molecules (HM-3 peptide), which targets α v β 3 integrin overexpressed on cancer cells, and the micelle core was cross-linked by GSH-disintegrable disulfide linkages for controlled drug release. HM-PMss/CTX micelles were prepared using a mixture of two functionalized amphiphilic block copolymers and found to physically encapsulate CTX with excellent entrapment efficiency (93.94±4.19%), drug-loading capacity (8.39±2.28%), and a narrow size distribution. In vitro release profiles showed that CTX remained stably entrapped in the micelles in a release medium without GSH or with GSH of low concentration, while undergoing a rapid release in a highly reductive environment. Cellular uptake experiments showed that the conjugation of the targeting peptide, containing an arginine-glycine-aspartate sequence, enhanced the cellular uptake of HM-PMss/CTX micelles via α v β 3 integrin-mediated endocytosis. In vitro cell viability measurements revealed that blank micelles were biocompatible, while HM-PMss/CTX micelles, owing to their tumor-targeting ability and GSH sensitivity, effectively inhibited the proliferation of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells. These results indicate that HM-PMss/CTX micelles could be a promising platform for future intelligent drug delivery in cancer therapy.
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