Peptide-Induced Self-Assembly of Therapeutics into a Well-Defined Nanoshell with Tumor-Triggered Shape and Charge Switch

  • Wangxiao He
  • , Jin Yan
  • , Wei Jiang
  • , Shichao Li
  • , Yiping Qu
  • , Fan Niu
  • , Yuwei Yan
  • , Fang Sui
  • , Simeng Wang
  • , Yi Zhou
  • , Liang Jin
  • , Yujun Li
  • , Meiju Ji
  • , Peter X. Ma
  • , Min Liu
  • , Wuyuan Lu
  • , Peng Hou

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

41 Scopus citations

Abstract

Peptide-tuned self-assembly of macromolecular agents (>500 Da) such as therapeutic peptides offers a strategy to improve the properties and biofunctions of degradable nanomaterials, but the tough requirement of macromolecular therapeutics delivery and a lack of understanding of peptide-based self-assembly design present high barriers for their applications. Herein, we developed a new strategy for nanoengineering macromolecular drugs by an elaborate peptide, termed PSP (VVVVVHHRGDC), capable of directly conjugating with cargo to be a PSP-cargo monomer as building block tending to self-assemble into a well-defined nanoshell with tumor-triggered shape and charge switch. As a proof of concept, conjugation PSP to a D-peptide activator of tumor suppressor p53 termed DPMI (1492.5 Da) generated hollow spheres ∼80 nm in diameter named PSP-DPMI that disintegrated only in the acidic microenvironment of tumor tissues, followed by integrin-mediated cellular uptake of PSP-DPMI monomers. Importantly, PSP-based self-assembly successfully endowed the DPMI with long circulation time and high cancer-cell-specific intracellular accumulation. PSP-DPMI nanoshells potently inhibited tumor growth in vitro and in vivo by the p53 restoration, while maintaining a highly favorable in vivo safety profile. Out of conventional encapsulation and conjugation, our study showcases a clinically viable novel method to nanoengineer macromolecular agents such as peptide for anticancer therapy and provides a hazard-free alternative strategy for the theranostics delivery.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)7034-7046
Number of pages13
JournalChemistry of Materials
Volume30
Issue number20
DOIs
StatePublished - 23 Oct 2018

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Peptide-Induced Self-Assembly of Therapeutics into a Well-Defined Nanoshell with Tumor-Triggered Shape and Charge Switch'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this