Targeted
Covalent Nanodrugs Reinvigorate Antitumor
Immunity and Kill Tumors via Improving Intratumoral Accumulation and
Retention of Doxorubicin
Posted on 2025-01-06 - 16:05
Specifically
improving the intratumoral accumulation and retention
and achieving the maximum therapeutic efficacy of small-molecule chemotherapeutics
remains a considerable challenge. To address the issue, we here reported
near-infrared (NIR) irradiation-activatable targeted covalent nanodrugs
by installing diazirine-labeled transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1)-targeted
aptamers on PEGylated phospholipid-coated upconversion nanoparticles
followed by doxorubicin loading. Targeted covalent nanodrugs recognized
and then were activated to covalently cross-link with TfR1 on cancer
cells by 980 nm NIR irradiation. Systematic studies revealed that
they achieved >6- and >5.5-fold higher intratumoral accumulations
of doxorubicin than aptamer-based targeted nanodrugs at 6 and 120
h post intravenous injection, respectively. Based on high drug delivery
efficacy, targeted covalent nanodrugs boosted doxorubicin-induced
immunogenic cell death, activated antitumor immune responses and shrank
the sizes of both primary and distant tumors, and displayed better
therapeutic efficacy and less adverse effect than targeted nanodrugs
and commercial Doxil in 4T1 syngeneic breast tumor model featuring
an immunosuppressive microenvironment. By integrating the specificity
of molecular recognition, the reactivity profile of diazirine and
the accuracy of light manipulation with nanodrug supremacy, our targeted
covalent nanodrugs could be expected as a longer-term and efficient
strategy to improve anticancer therapeutic efficacy of chemotherapeutics.
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Zhu, Zhijia; Shang, Yanxue; Lin, Chukai; Zhang, Dongchen; Ai, Lili; Li, Youshan; et al. (2025). Targeted
Covalent Nanodrugs Reinvigorate Antitumor
Immunity and Kill Tumors via Improving Intratumoral Accumulation and
Retention of Doxorubicin. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.4c12447Â