학술논문

A lava-inspired proteolytic enzyme therapy on cancer with a PEG-based hydrogel enhances tumor distribution and penetration of liposomes
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Nanobiotechnology, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-19 (2024)
Subject
Proteolytic enzyme therapy
Tumor distribution of nanomedicine
Enzyme-assisted crosslinking
Hydrogel
Biotechnology
TP248.13-248.65
Medical technology
R855-855.5
Language
English
ISSN
1477-3155
Abstract
Abstract The enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect has become the guiding principle for nanomedicine against cancer for a long time. However, several biological barriers severely resist therapeutic agents’ penetration and retention into the deep tumor tissues, resulting in poor EPR effect and high tumor mortality. Inspired by lava, we proposed a proteolytic enzyme therapy to improve the tumor distribution and penetration of nanomedicine. A trypsin-crosslinked hydrogel (Trypsin@PSA Gel) was developed to maintain trypsin’s activity. The hydrogel postponed trypsin’s self-degradation and sustained the release. Trypsin promoted the cellular uptake of nanoformulations in breast cancer cells, enhanced the penetration through endothelial cells, and degraded total and membrane proteins. Proteomic analysis reveals that trypsin affected ECM components and down-regulated multiple pathways associated with cancer progression. Intratumoral injection of Trypsin@PSA Gel significantly increased the distribution of liposomes in tumors and reduced tumor vasculature. Combination treatment with intravenous injection of gambogic acid-loaded liposomes and intratumoral injection of Trypsin@PSA Gel inhibited tumor growth. The current study provides one of the first investigations into the enhanced tumor distribution of liposomes induced by a novel proteolytic enzyme therapy. Graphic Abstract