Publication | Closed Access
Natural Small Molecules Enabled Efficient Immunotherapy through Supramolecular Self-Assembly in P53-Mutated Colorectal Cancer
44
Citations
29
References
2022
Year
NanoparticlesEngineeringImmunoeditingCancer BiologyTumor BiologyNanomedicineNatural Molecule HonokiolRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchTumor TargetingPharmacologyCancer TherapiesCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentBiomolecular EngineeringDrug TargetingPolymer-drug ConjugatePharmaceutical NanotechnologyDrug Delivery SystemsImmune Checkpoint InhibitorNano-drug DeliveryMedicineP53-mutated Colorectal CancerSmall MoleculesSupramolecular Self-assembly
Nanomedicine, constructed from therapeutics, presents an advantage in drug delivery for cancer therapies. However, nanocarrier-based treatment systems have problems such as interbatch variability, multicomponent complexity, poor drug delivery, and carrier-related toxicity. To solve these issues, the natural molecule honokiol (HK), an anticancer agent in a phase I clinical trial (CTR20170822), was used to form a self-assembly nanoparticle (SA) through hydrogen bonding and hydrophobicity. The preparation of SA needs no molecular precursors or excipients in aqueous solution, and 100% drug-loaded SA exhibited superior tumor-targeting ability due to the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect. Moreover, SA significantly enhanced the antitumor immunity relative to free HK, and the mechanism has notable selectivity to the p53 pathway. Furthermore, SA exhibited excellent physiological stability and inappreciable toxicity. Taken together, this supramolecular self-assembly strategy provides a safe and "molecular economy" model for rational design of clinical therapies and is expected to promote targeted therapy of HK, especially in colorectal cancer patients with obvious p53 status.
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