Abstract

Cancer chemotherapy is challenged by multidrug resistance (MDR) mainly attributed to overexpressed transmembrane efflux pump P-glycoprotein (P-gp) in cancer cells. Improving drug delivery efficacy while co-delivering P-gp inhibitors to suppress drug efflux is an often-used nanostrategy for combating MDR, which is however challenged by cascaded bio-barriers en route to cancer cells and P-gp inhibitors' adverse effects. To effectively breach the cascaded bio-barriers while avoiding P-gp inhibitors' adverse effects, a stealthy, sequentially responsive doxorubicin (DOX) delivery nanosystem (RCMSNs) is fabricated, composed of an extracellular-tumor-acidity-responsive polymer shell (PEG-b-PLLDA), pH/redox dual-responsive mesoporous silica nanoparticle-based carriers (MSNs-SS-Py), and cationic β-cyclodextrin-PEI (CD-PEI) gatekeepers. The PEG-b-PLLDA corona makes RCMSNs stealthy with prolonged blood circulation time. Once tumors are reached, extracellular acidity degrades PEG-b-PLLDA, reversing nanosystem's surface charges to be positive, which drastically improves RCMSNs' tumor accumulation, penetration, and cellular internalization. Within cancer cells, CD-PEI gatekeepers detach to allow DOX unloading in response to intracellular acidity and glutathione and functionally act as a P-gp inhibitor, dampening P-gp's efflux activity by impairing ATP production. Thus, the resultant high-efficacy drug delivery along with reduced P-gp function cooperatively reverses MDR in vitro. Importantly, in preclinical tumor models, DOX@RCMSNs potently suppress MDR tumor growth without eliciting systemic toxicity, demonstrating their potential of clinical translation.

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