Publication | Closed Access
Synthesis, characterization, and <i>in vitro</i> evaluation of TRAIL-modified, cabazitaxel -loaded polymeric micelles for achieving synergistic anticancer therapy
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Citations
31
References
2018
Year
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 <sup>1</sup>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.
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