TY - JOUR
T1 - Cation-π Interaction-Mediated Tumour Drug Delivery for Deep Intratumoral Penetration and Treatment
AU - Liu, Chengfei
AU - Li, Muqiong
AU - Sun, Jianxiang
AU - Li, Pengxiang
AU - Bai, Yang
AU - Zhang, Ju An
AU - Qian, Yongchao
AU - Shi, Menghan
AU - He, Jia
AU - Huo, Hongbin
AU - Pang, Jun
AU - Fan, Li
AU - Tian, Wei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2022/10/5
Y1 - 2022/10/5
N2 - The limited efficacy of deep tumor treatments has been considered the “Achilles’ heel” of anticancer therapy due to multiple biological barriers. Whether passive diffusion or active transport has difficulties completely overcoming these obstacles. Herein, cation-π interactions are utilized to construct a tumor drug delivery system integrating the merits of both passive and active transport mechanisms. A cation-π interaction bridged trimetallic supramolecular drug complex (Cπ-TMSDC) is constructed based on a drug consisting of one cisplatin molecule linked by K+ (Pt-COOK) and the other drug with a Ru metal complex containing curcumin (Ru-Cur). The obtained Cπ-TMSDC further self-assembles into cation-π-based trimetallic supramolecular drug micelles (Cπ-TMSDMs) with efficient and stable transportation in vivo due to the strong cation-π interaction formed between K+ and the curcumin unit in the Cπ-TMSDC. In acidic tumor microenvironment, the cation-π interaction smartly dissociates, facilitating the quick release of Pt-COOK outside Cπ-TMSDMs to rapidly infiltrate the outer cellular layers by passive diffusion. Meanwhile, the dissociated Ru-Cur from the core layer of the Cπ-TMSDMs form secondary self-assemblies to deeply penetrate inside the solid tumor. Therefore, this strategy results in an efficient tumor drug delivery platform with enhanced deep intratumoral penetration, improved therapeutic effects, and reduced systemic toxicity to normal organs.
AB - The limited efficacy of deep tumor treatments has been considered the “Achilles’ heel” of anticancer therapy due to multiple biological barriers. Whether passive diffusion or active transport has difficulties completely overcoming these obstacles. Herein, cation-π interactions are utilized to construct a tumor drug delivery system integrating the merits of both passive and active transport mechanisms. A cation-π interaction bridged trimetallic supramolecular drug complex (Cπ-TMSDC) is constructed based on a drug consisting of one cisplatin molecule linked by K+ (Pt-COOK) and the other drug with a Ru metal complex containing curcumin (Ru-Cur). The obtained Cπ-TMSDC further self-assembles into cation-π-based trimetallic supramolecular drug micelles (Cπ-TMSDMs) with efficient and stable transportation in vivo due to the strong cation-π interaction formed between K+ and the curcumin unit in the Cπ-TMSDC. In acidic tumor microenvironment, the cation-π interaction smartly dissociates, facilitating the quick release of Pt-COOK outside Cπ-TMSDMs to rapidly infiltrate the outer cellular layers by passive diffusion. Meanwhile, the dissociated Ru-Cur from the core layer of the Cπ-TMSDMs form secondary self-assemblies to deeply penetrate inside the solid tumor. Therefore, this strategy results in an efficient tumor drug delivery platform with enhanced deep intratumoral penetration, improved therapeutic effects, and reduced systemic toxicity to normal organs.
KW - cation-π interaction
KW - deep intratumoral penetration
KW - trimetallic supramolecular complex
KW - tumor drug delivery
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85135111805&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/adfm.202205043
DO - 10.1002/adfm.202205043
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85135111805
SN - 1616-301X
VL - 32
JO - Advanced Functional Materials
JF - Advanced Functional Materials
IS - 40
M1 - 2205043
ER -