Abstract

Glioblastoma is a particularly challenging cancer, as there are currently limited options for treatment. New delivery routes are being explored, including direct intratumoral injection via convection-enhanced delivery (CED). While promising, convection-enhanced delivery of traditional chemotherapeutics such as doxorubicin (DOX) has seen limited success. Several studies have demonstrated that attaching a drug to polymeric nanoscale materials can improve drug delivery efficacy via CED. We therefore set out to evaluate a panel of morphologically distinct protein nanoparticles for their potential as CED drug delivery vehicles for glioblastoma treatment. The panel consisted of three different virus-like particles (VLPs), MS2 spheres, tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) disks and nanophage filamentous rods modified with DOX. While all three VLPs displayed adequate drug delivery and cell uptake in vitro, increased survival rates were only observed for glioma-bearing mice that were treated via CED with TMV disks and MS2 spheres conjugated to doxorubicin, with TMV-treated mice showing the best response. Importantly, these improved survival rates were observed after only a single VLP–DOX CED injection several orders of magnitude smaller than traditional IV doses. Overall, this study underscores the potential of nanoscale chemotherapeutic CED using virus-like particles and illustrates the need for further studies into how the overall morphology of VLPs influences their drug delivery properties.

Highlights

  • Protein-based nanomaterials are a promising class of nanocarriers for drug delivery and diagnostic applications

  • We recently reported a stable nanodisk composed of a double-arginine mutant of the tobacco mosaic virus [30]

  • In order to investigate the potential of our virus-like particles (VLPs) panel as nanocarriers for glioblastoma treatment, we synthesized a series of conjugates with the chemotherapeutic molecule doxorubicin (DOX)

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Summary

Introduction

Protein-based nanomaterials are a promising class of nanocarriers for drug delivery and diagnostic applications. VLPs are degradable in the body and have demonstrated few toxicity issues [1,5] These protein-based nanomaterials allow for site-selective modification through amino acid mutagenesis of natural or noncanonical amino acids into the protein backbone [6,13,14,15]. This site-selective conjugation allows for greater control over the location and amount of cargo loaded onto the VLPs, which can have significant effects on cancer targeting and delivery efficiencies

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