Stimulus-responsive hybrid nanoparticles based on multiple lipids for the co-delivery of doxorubicin and Sphk2-siRNA and breast cancer therapy.

Journal: Food And Chemical Toxicology : An International Journal Published For The British Industrial Biological Research Association
Published:
Abstract

The development of breast cancer is usually related to multiple pathways. A combinatory therapeutic system that combines drug/siRNA targeting several independent pathways has become an attractive approach to reduce the side effects and improve the efficiency of antitumor drugs. Herein, we designed a unique micelle-liposome hybrid nanoparticle platform for the combinatory administration of the cytotoxic drug DOX and Sphk2-siRNA for the treatment of multidrug-resistant (MDR) cancer. The synthesized lipid dioleoyl ethanolamine (DE) and pH-responsive DOPE were used to produce DOX/siRNA co-loaded hybrid nanoparticle (DOX-MC-siSphk2/ASLNP), with high drug-loading capacity and transfection efficacy. We demonstrated that simultaneous cellular endocytosis of DOX/siRNA induced by nanoparticles in MCF-7/ADR cells could acquire higher drug cytotoxicity and contribute to increasing the apoptosis of tumor cell. Furthermore, DOX-MC-siSphk2/ASLNP could significantly block the tumor growth of MDR breast cancer in xenograft mouse model with lower cardiotoxicity.

Authors
Jinying Liang, Shiqi Guo, Mengxin Bai, Mengying Huang, Yupeng Qu, Ying Zhao, Yu Song
Relevant Conditions

Breast Cancer