Abstract

One of the main reasons why most cancer patients do not respond well to chemotherapy is that drugs cannot accumulate in tumors at an optimal dose, eventually resulting in failure to prevent cancer cell growth. To improve drug delivery efficiency, we engineered a highly efficient tumor-targeted and stroma-breaking nanocarrier by the modification of iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) with a tumor-targeting peptide c(RGDyK) and a hyaluronidase (HAase) on the surface. The yielding nanocomplex, c(RGDyK)-HAase-IONP, targeted the tumor by binding integrin αvβ3 and went deeply into the tumors by the degradation of hyaluronic acid (HA), which was highly expressed in the tumor extracellular matrix (ECM). Good biostability and a low pH preferred drug release profile were characterized for c(RGDyK)-HAase-IONP carrying DOX in vitro. c(RGDyK)-HAase-IONP showed an improved tumor-targeting (2.5 times higher) effect after intravenous injection in the MC38 tumor-bearing mice model, as determined by whole-body fluorescence imaging compared to the non-targeted IONPs without HAase. After 5 systemic treatments, c(RGDyK)-HAase-IONP/DOX (5 mg/kg of equivalent dose of DOX) significantly inhibited MC38 tumor growth (22.1 ± 7.4 times relative to the non-treated group). Elevated apoptosis and reduced proliferation in the tumor cell were detected in the c(RGDyK)-HAase-IONP/DOX treated tumors compared to the control groups. Overall, the highly efficient targeted nanocarrier c(RGDyK)-HAase-IONP demonstrated tremendous potency for improving drug delivery and tumor therapy efficacy by targeted degradation of the dense HA barrier in the tumor ECM. We determined that such a tumor stroma-degrading nanosystem was capable of reducing tumor recurrence and drug resistance and could ultimately improve clinical tumor treatment responses.

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