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Versatile ginsenoside Rg3 liposomes inhibit tumor metastasis by capturing circulating tumor cells and destroying metastatic niches
Author(s) -
Jiaxuan Xia,
Shaojie Ma,
Xi Zhu,
Chen Chen,
Ru Zhang,
Zhonglian Cao,
Xing Chen,
Long-Long Zhang,
Ying Zhu,
Shuya Zhang,
Shiyi Li,
Guolong Gu,
Xunbin Wei,
Kunqian Yu,
Jianxin Wang
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.abj1262
Subject(s) - liposome , cancer research , metastasis , nanocarriers , chemistry , tumor microenvironment , docetaxel , medicine , pharmacology , cancer , drug , tumor cells , biochemistry
Limited circulating tumor cells (CTCs) capturing efficiency and lack of regulation capability on CTC-supportive metastatic niches (MNs) are two main obstacles hampering the clinical translation of conventional liposomes for the treatment of metastatic breast cancers. Traditional delivery strategies, such as ligand modification and immune modulator co-encapsulation for nanocarriers, are inefficient and laborious. Here, a multifunctional Rg3 liposome loading with docetaxel (Rg3-Lp/DTX) was developed, in which Rg3 was proved to intersperse in the phospholipid bilayer and exposed its glycosyl on the liposome surface. Therefore, it exhibited much higher CTC-capturing efficiency via interaction with glucose transporter 1 (Glut1) overexpressed on CTCs. After reaching the lungs with CTCs, Rg3 inhibited the formation of MNs by reversing the immunosuppressive microenvironment. Together, Rg3-Lp/DTX exhibited excellent metastasis inhibition capacity by CTC (“seeds”) neutralization and MN (“soil”) inhibition. The strategy has great clinical translation prospects for antimetastasis treatment with enhanced therapeutic efficacy and simple preparation process.

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