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Self‐Assembled Bifunctional Peptide as Effective Drug Delivery Vector with Powerful Antitumor Activity
Author(s) -
Fan Rangrang,
Mei Lan,
Gao Xiang,
Wang Yuelong,
Xiang Mingli,
Zheng Yu,
Tong Aiping,
Zhang Xiaoning,
Han Bo,
Zhou Liangxue,
Mi Peng,
You Chao,
Qian Zhiyong,
Wei Yuquan,
Guo Gang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
advanced science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.388
H-Index - 100
ISSN - 2198-3844
DOI - 10.1002/advs.201600285
Subject(s) - peptide , cancer research , chemistry , in vivo , drug delivery , bifunctional , peptide sequence , apoptosis , alanine , amino acid , biochemistry , biology , gene , catalysis , microbiology and biotechnology , organic chemistry
E‐cadherin/catenin complex is crucial for cancer cell migration and invasion. The histidine‐alanine‐valine (HAV) sequence has been shown to inhibit a variety of cadherin‐based functions. In this study, by fusing HAV and the classical tumor‐targeting Arg‐Gly‐Asp (RGD) motif and Asn‐Gly‐Arg (NGR) motif to the apoptosis‐inducing peptide sequence‐AVPIAQK, a bifunctional peptide has been constructed with enhanced tumor targeting and apoptosis effects. This peptide is further processed as a nanoscale vector to encapsulate the hydrophobic drug docetaxel (DOC). Bioimaging analysis shows that peptide nanoparticles can penetrate into xenograft tumor cells with a significantly long retention in tumors and high tumor targeting specificity. In vivo, DOC/peptide NPs are substantially more effective at inhibiting tumor growth and prolonging survival compared with DOC control. Together, the findings of this study suggest that DOC/peptide NPs may have promising applications in pulmonary carcinoma therapy.

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