Abstract

In vivo delivery of small molecule therapeutics to cancer cells, assessment of the selectivity of administration, and measuring the efficacity of the drug in question at the molecule level, are important ongoing challenges in developing new classes of cancer chemotherapeutics. One approach that has the potential to provide targeted delivery, tracking of biodistribution and readout of efficacy, is to use multimodal theragnostic nanoparticles to deliver the small molecule therapeutic. In this paper, we report the development of targeted theragnostic lipid/peptide/DNA lipopolyplexes. These simultaneously deliver an inhibitor of the EGFR tyrosine kinase, and plasmid DNA coding for a Crk-based biosensor, Picchu-X, which when expressed in the target cells can be used to quantify the inhibition of EGFR in vivo in a mouse colorectal cancer xenograft model. Reversible bioconjugation of a known analogue of the tyrosine kinase inhibitor Mo-IPQA to a cationic peptide, and co-formulation with peptides containing both EGFR-binding and cationic sequences, allowed for good levels of inhibitor encapsulation with targeted delivery to LIM1215 colon cancer cells. Furthermore, high levels of expression of the Picchu-X biosensor in the LIM1215 cells in vivo allowed us to demonstrate, using fluorescence lifetime microscopy (FLIM)-based biosensing, that EGFR activity can be successfully suppressed by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor, released from the lipopolyplexes. Finally, we measured the biodistribution of lipopolyplexes containing 125I-labelled inhibitors and were able to demonstrate that the lipopolyplexes gave significantly higher drug delivery to the tumors compared with free drug.

Highlights

  • Current challenges in next-generation medicine have stimulated the rapid development of theragnostic agents

  • As well as successfully demonstrating the inhibition of tyrosine phosphorylation by Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in vivo, and showing a significant degree of intratumoral heterogeneity in EGFR activity, our results showed that small molecule tyrosine kinase activity (TKI) have a very poor uptake in cancer cells, and that the uptake is unselective

  • We report the development of the first targeted, lipopolyplex-based theragnostic nanoparticle that improves drug delivery to cancer cells, allows quantification of the biodistribution, and provides a readout of TKI mediated enzyme inhibition

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Summary

Introduction

Current challenges in next-generation medicine have stimulated the rapid development of theragnostic agents. We report the development of the first targeted, lipopolyplex-based theragnostic nanoparticle that improves drug delivery to cancer cells, allows quantification of the biodistribution, and provides a readout of TKI mediated enzyme inhibition.

Results
Conclusion
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