scholarly journals Environmentally Responsive Dual-Targeting Nanoparticles: Improving Drug Accumulation in Cancer Cells as a Way of Preventing Anticancer Drug Efflux

2018 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 934-941 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cenk Daglioglu
2006 ◽  
Vol 17 (14) ◽  
pp. 3622-3626 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renyun Zhang ◽  
Xuemei Wang ◽  
Chunhui Wu ◽  
Min Song ◽  
Jingyuan Li ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (28) ◽  
pp. 3319-3332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chuanmin Zhang ◽  
Shubiao Zhang ◽  
Defu Zhi ◽  
Jingnan Cui

There are several mechanisms by which cancer cells develop resistance to treatments, including increasing anti-apoptosis, increasing drug efflux, inducing angiogenesis, enhancing DNA repair and altering cell cycle checkpoints. The drugs are hard to reach curative effects due to these resistance mechanisms. It has been suggested that liposomes based co-delivery systems, which can deliver drugs and genes to the same tumor cells and exhibit synergistic anti-cancer effects, could be used to overcome the resistance of cancer cells. As the co-delivery systems could simultaneously block two or more pathways, this might promote the death of cancer cells by sensitizing cells to death stimuli. This article provides a brief review on the liposomes based co-delivery systems to overcome cancer resistance by the synergistic effects of drugs and genes. Particularly, the synergistic effects of combinatorial anticancer drugs and genes in various cancer models employing multifunctional liposomes based co-delivery systems have been discussed. This review also gives new insights into the challenges of liposomes based co-delivery systems in the field of cancer therapy, by which we hope to provide some suggestions on the development of liposomes based co-delivery systems.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 2924
Author(s):  
Cláudia Camacho ◽  
Helena Tomás ◽  
João Rodrigues

The DACHPtCl2 compound (trans-(R,R)-1,2-diaminocyclohexanedichloroplatinum(II)) is a potent anticancer drug with a broad spectrum of activity and is less toxic than oxaliplatin (trans-l-diaminocyclohexane oxalate platinum II), with which it shares the active metal fragment DACHPt. Nevertheless, due to poor water solubility, its use as a chemotherapeutic drug is limited. Here, DACHPtCl2 was conjugated, in a bidentate form, with half-generation PAMAM dendrimers (G0.5–G3.5) with carboxylate end-groups, and the resulting conjugates were evaluated against various types of cancer cell lines. In this way, we aimed at increasing the solubility and availability at the target site of DACHPt while potentially reducing the adverse side effects. DNA binding assays showed a hyperchromic effect compatible with DNA helix’s disruption upon the interaction of the metallodendrimers and/or the released active metallic fragments with DNA. Furthermore, the prepared DACHPt metallodendrimers presented cytotoxicity in a wide set of cancer cell lines used (the relative potency regarding oxaliplatin was in general high) and were not hemotoxic. Importantly, their selectivity for A2780 and CACO-2 cancer cells with respect to non-cancer cells was particularly high. Subsequently, the anticancer drug 5-FU was loaded in a selected metallodendrimer (the G2.5COO(DACHPt)16) to investigate a possible synergistic effect between the two drugs carried by the same dendrimer scaffold and tested for cytotoxicity in A2780cisR and CACO-2 cancer cell lines. This combination resulted in IC50 values much lower than the IC50 for 5-FU but higher than those found for the metallodendrimers without 5-FU. It seems, thus, that the metallic fragment-induced cytotoxicity dominates over the cytotoxicity of 5-FU in the set of considered cell lines.


2020 ◽  
Vol 861 ◽  
pp. 303-308
Author(s):  
Guo Li Gong ◽  
Zhi Qiang Liu

Sorangium cellulosum can product many secondary metabolites that is unique structural and makes these microorganisms highly attractive for drug development, especially epothilone, on cancer cells a cytotoxic macrolide which is naturally produced by Soxhlet cellulose that have the action of microtubule stabilization, is a promising anticancer drug. In this research, the factors affecting the regeneration and preparation of the protoplast of Sorangium cellulosum were discussed, those were regeneration media, enzymes and osmotic stabilizers. This study provide the distruction for improving the production of epothilone through genome shuffling, mutation, fusion and transformation.


2012 ◽  
Vol 315 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Till Krech ◽  
Elisa Scheuerer ◽  
Robert Geffers ◽  
Hans Kreipe ◽  
Ulrich Lehmann ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 1217-1226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars Tögel ◽  
Rebecca Nightingale ◽  
Anderly C. Chueh ◽  
Aparna Jayachandran ◽  
Hoanh Tran ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 119 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reza Karimi Shervedani ◽  
Hadiseh Mirhosseini ◽  
Marzieh Samiei Foroushani ◽  
Mostafa Torabi ◽  
Fatemeh Rahnemaye Rahsepar ◽  
...  

Pharmaceutics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 1990
Author(s):  
Kai Zhang ◽  
Jingjing Li ◽  
Xiaofei Xin ◽  
Xiaoqing Du ◽  
Di Zhao ◽  
...  

The co-delivery of chemotherapeutic agents and immune modulators to their targets remains to be a great challenge for nanocarriers. Here, we developed a hybrid thermosensitive nanoparticle (TMNP) which could co-deliver paclitaxel-loaded transferrin (PTX@TF) and marimastat-loaded thermosensitive liposomes (MMST/LTSLs) for the dual targeting of cancer cells and the microenvironment. TMNPs could rapidly release the two payloads triggered by the hyperthermia treatment at the site of tumor. The released PTX@TF entered cancer cells via transferrin-receptor-mediated endocytosis and inhibited the survival of tumor cells. MMST was intelligently employed as an immunomodulator to improve immunotherapy by inhibiting matrix metalloproteinases to reduce chemokine degradation and recruit T cells. The TMNPs promoted the tumor infiltration of CD3+ T cells by 2-fold, including memory/effector CD8+ T cells (4.2-fold) and CD4+ (1.7-fold), but not regulatory T cells. Our in vivo anti-tumor experiment suggested that TMNPs possessed the highest tumor growth inhibitory rate (80.86%) compared with the control group. We demonstrated that the nanoplatform could effectively inhibit the growth of tumors and enhance T cell recruitment through the co-delivery of paclitaxel and marimastat, which could be a promising strategy for the combination of chemotherapy and immunotherapy for cancer treatment.


Author(s):  
Kelvin F. Pratama ◽  
Muhammad Fauzi ◽  
Aliya Nur Hasanah

The biggest case of death in 2018 is caused by lung cancer. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is most common. One of the cause lung cancer is the over expression of EGFR. Erlotinib is the first line of anticancer for NSCLC with EGFR mutations. However, erlotinib can cause side effects such as liver damage therefore new safe anticancer is needed. Trigonelline is an alkaloid compound from coffee beans that had anticancer activity in pancreatic cancer cells by inhibiting Nrf2 in vitro and in vivo at concentrations of 0.1-1 µM. Development of cancer cells by Nrf2 is regulated by EGFR. In this study screening and modification of trigonelline structure was carried out to obtain compounds that have anticancer activity on NSCLC against EGFR computationally. The research procedures carried out are modification of ten trigonelline derived structures, the molecular docking and prediction of physicochemical profiles from trigonelline and its modification also their ADMET. Based on results, KF9 has the lowest free energy of binding which was -8,88 kcal/mol and binds to Met769 which has biological activity with receptor. KF9 has good physiochemical profile and absorption, distribution, also toxicity parameters. KF9 has potential to become a new anticancer drug for NSCLC.Keywords: Coffee, Drug discovery and Drug development, Molecular structure modification, Nonsmall cell lung cancer, Trigonelline


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