Abstract

Targeted delivery of antitumor drugs is particularly important in tumour treatment. Tumour-targeted peptide is a very effective drug carrier for tumour therapy. Here, we screened and characterised a highly efficient targeted peptide named IHP5, which was derived from insulin-like growth factor binding proteins (IGFBPs). IHP5 exhibited preferential binding to the tested tumour cell lines. The delivery efficiency of IHP5 was higher in various tested tumour cells than in normal cells, especially in the human cervical cancer cell line HeLa, which was 11.7-fold higher than in normal human embryonic kidney cells HEK293. Moreover, the penetration efficiency of IHP5 was 13 times higher than that of the classical cell penetrating peptide TAT in HeLa cells. Detail analysis revealed that IHP5 endocytosis was possibly correlated with acetylated heparan sulphate proteoglycans including phosphatidylinositol proteoglycan 3 (GPC3), phosphatidylinositol proteoglycan 5 (GPC5) and syndecan 2 (SDC2). Subsequently, the introduction of IHP5 enhanced the inhibitory effect of trichosanthin (TCS) on tumour cells, resulting in at least 19-fold increase in tumour cells without enhanced cytotoxicity in normal cells HEK293. These results suggested that IHP5, as a novel tumour cell-targeting penetrating peptide with the ability to target tumour cells, has great potential in drug delivery applications.

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