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Artificial Chemical Reporter Targeting Strategy Using Bioorthogonal Click Reaction for Improving Active-Targeting Efficiency of Tumor

Title
Artificial Chemical Reporter Targeting Strategy Using Bioorthogonal Click Reaction for Improving Active-Targeting Efficiency of Tumor
Authors
Yoon H.Y.Shin M.L.Shim M.K.Lee S.Na J.H.Koo H.Lee H.Kim J.-H.Lee K.Y.Kim K.Kwon I.C.
Ewha Authors
이혁진
SCOPUS Author ID
이혁진scopus
Issue Date
2017
Journal Title
Molecular Pharmaceutics
ISSN
1543-8384JCR Link
Citation
Molecular Pharmaceutics vol. 14, no. 5, pp. 1558 - 1570
Keywords
active tumor targetingbioorthogonal click reactionheterogeneitymetabolic glycoengineering
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Biological ligands such as aptamer, antibody, glucose, and peptide have been widely used to bind specific surface molecules or receptors in tumor cells or subcellular structures to improve tumor-targeting efficiency of nanoparticles. However, this active-targeting strategy has limitations for tumor targeting due to inter- and intraheterogeneity of tumors. In this study, we demonstrated an alternative active-targeting strategy using metabolic engineering and bioorthogonal click reaction to improve tumor-targeting efficiency of nanoparticles. We observed that azide-containing chemical reporters were successfully generated onto surface glycans of various tumor cells such as lung cancer (A549), brain cancer (U87), and breast cancer (BT-474, MDA-MB231, MCF-7) via metabolic engineering in vitro. In addition, we compared tumor targeting of artificial azide reporter with bicyclononyne (BCN)-conjugated glycol chitosan nanoparticles (BCN-CNPs) and integrin αvβ3 with cyclic RGD-conjugated CNPs (cRGD-CNPs) in vitro and in vivo. Fluorescence intensity of azide-reporter-targeted BCN-CNPs in tumor tissues was 1.6-fold higher and with a more uniform distribution compared to that of cRGD-CNPs. Moreover, even in the isolated heterogeneous U87 cells, BCN-CNPs could bind artificial azide reporters on tumor cells more uniformly (∼92.9%) compared to cRGD-CNPs. Therefore, the artificial azide-reporter-targeting strategy can be utilized for targeting heterogeneous tumor cells via bioorthogonal click reaction and may provide an alternative method of tumor targeting for further investigation in cancer therapy. © 2017 American Chemical Society.
DOI
10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.6b01083
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약학대학 > 약학과 > Journal papers
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