Journal of Nanobiotechnology (Nov 2024)
Dual targeting and bioresponsive nano-PROTAC induced precise and effective lung cancer therapy
Abstract
Abstract Epigenetic regulation has emerged as a promising therapeutic strategy for lung cancer treatment, which can facilitate the antitumor responses by modulating epigenetic dysregulation of target proteins in lung cancer. The proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) reagent, dBET6 shows effective inhibition of bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4) that exerts antitumor efficacy by degrading BRD4 via the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Nevertheless, the low tissue specificity and bioavailability impede its therapeutic effects and clinical translation on lung cancer treatment. Herein, we developed a type of dual targeting and bioresponsive nano-PROTAC (c R GD/L LC membrane/D S-P LGA/d B ET6, named RLDPB), which was constructed by using the pH and glutathione (GSH)-responsive polymer, disulfide bond-linked poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA-S-S-PLGA, DS-PLGA) to load the PROTAC agent dBET6, and further camouflaged with the homotypic LLC cell membranes, followed by the conjugation with cRGD ligand to the surface of the nanoparticles. Notably, RLDPB showed enhanced celluar uptake by lung cancer cells in vitro and accumulation in the tumors via the dual targeting structure including cRGD and LLC membrane. The pH/GSH responsiveness improved the release of dBET6 from the DS-PLGA-based nanoparticles within the cells. RLDPB was demonstrated to facilitate tumor regression by inducing the apoptosis of lung cancer cells with the degradation of BRD4. Thus, RLDPB can be considered a powerful tool to suppress lung cancer, which opens a new avenue to treat lung cancer by PROTAC. Graphical abstract
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