Abstract

A drug-loaded tumor cell (DLTC) system has been developed for lung metastasis-targeting drug delivery. Doxorubicin was loaded into B16-F10 murine melanoma cells (96 microg/10(6) cells). The loading process led to the death of all the carrier cells. The diameter of DLTC was 15.03+/-2.36 microm (mean +/- SD). The amount and rate of doxorubicin being released from the DLTC mainly depended on the drug loading and carrier cell concentration. Over a 6-month storage in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) at 4 degrees C, the decrease in intracellular drug concentration and the carrier cell number were less than 25% and 5%, respectively. After a bolus injection of 30 microg doxorubicin in either DLTC form or free solution into the mice tail veins, drug deposit in the lung from DLTC was 3.6-fold of that achieved by free drug solution. The latter resulted in higher drug content in liver and spleen. Extensive trypsinization of DLTC reduced its lung targeting effect by 30%, and the density of surface adhesion molecule GM3 on DLTC surface by 25%. In conclusion, this DLTC system demonstrated a lung-targeting activity that may be partially attributed to its specific surface characteristics.

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