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Protease‐Triggered, Integrin‐Targeted Cellular Uptake of Recombinant Protein Micelles
Author(s) -
Gao Chen,
Vargo Kevin B.,
Hammer Daniel A.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
macromolecular bioscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.924
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1616-5195
pISSN - 1616-5187
DOI - 10.1002/mabi.201600032
Subject(s) - proteases , micelle , oleosin , chemistry , thrombin , recombinant dna , rgd motif , biochemistry , biophysics , protease , microbiology and biotechnology , drug delivery , integrin , biology , receptor , enzyme , aqueous solution , platelet , organic chemistry , immunology , gene
Targeting nanoparticles for drug delivery has great potential for improving efficacy and reducing side effects from systemic toxicity. New developments in the assembly of materials afford the opportunity to expose cryptic targeting domains in tissue‐specific microenvironments in which certain proteases are expressed. Here, recombinant proteins are designed to combine the responsiveness to environmental proteases with specific targeting. Materials made recombinantly allow complete control over amino acid sequence, in which each molecule is identically functionalized. Previously, oleosin, a naturally occurring plant protein that acts as a surfactant, has been engineered to self‐assemble into spherical micelles—a useful structure for drug delivery. To make oleosins that are locally activated to bind receptors, oleosin is genetically modified to incorporate the integrin‐binding motif RGDS just behind a domain cleavable by thrombin. The resulting modified oleosin self‐assembles into spherical micelles in aqueous environments, with the RGDS motif protected by the thrombin‐cleavable domain. Upon the addition of thrombin, the RGDS is exposed and the binding of the spherical micelles to breast cancer cells is increased fourfold.