TY - JOUR
T1 - Diffusion-mediated carving of interior topologies of all-natural protein nanoparticles to tailor sustained drug release for effective breast cancer therapy
AU - Zhang, Hao
AU - Wang, Ren
AU - Wu, Chao
AU - Feng, Wei
AU - Zhong, Qixin
AU - Chen, Xianfu
AU - Wang, Tao
AU - Mao, Chuanbin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/4
Y1 - 2023/4
N2 - Proteins are promising base materials for developing drug carriers with efficient blood circulation due to low possibilities of clearance by macrophages. However, such natural biopolymers have highly sophisticated molecular structures, preventing them from being assembled into nano-platforms with manipulable payload release profiles. Here, we report the self-assembly of two natural proteins (milk casein and rice protein) into protein nanoparticles (NPs, ∼150 nm) with tailorable release profiles. Diffusion of plant-derived paclitaxel (PTX)-containing eugenol into the hydrophobic cores of the NPs and subsequent dialysis to remove eugenol from the cores lead to the carving of the NP interiors. With the increase in the mass ratios of casein and rice protein, this process generates all-natural NPs with PTX loaded in their full cavities, semi-full cavities, or solid cores. These NPs can be efficiently uptaken by breast cancer cells and could kill the cancer cells efficiently. PTX in these NPs demonstrates increasingly sustained in vivo release profiles from full cavities, semi-full cavities, to solid cores, gradually extending its pharmacokinetic profiles in blood plasma to favor drug accumulation in breast tumor models. Consequently, the NPs with solid cores completely inhibit tumor growth in vivo, more effectively than those with full and semi-full cavities. Our work opens up a new avenue to the use of diffusion-mediated nanoscale carving in producing biomaterials with controllable interior topologies relevant to drug release profiles.
AB - Proteins are promising base materials for developing drug carriers with efficient blood circulation due to low possibilities of clearance by macrophages. However, such natural biopolymers have highly sophisticated molecular structures, preventing them from being assembled into nano-platforms with manipulable payload release profiles. Here, we report the self-assembly of two natural proteins (milk casein and rice protein) into protein nanoparticles (NPs, ∼150 nm) with tailorable release profiles. Diffusion of plant-derived paclitaxel (PTX)-containing eugenol into the hydrophobic cores of the NPs and subsequent dialysis to remove eugenol from the cores lead to the carving of the NP interiors. With the increase in the mass ratios of casein and rice protein, this process generates all-natural NPs with PTX loaded in their full cavities, semi-full cavities, or solid cores. These NPs can be efficiently uptaken by breast cancer cells and could kill the cancer cells efficiently. PTX in these NPs demonstrates increasingly sustained in vivo release profiles from full cavities, semi-full cavities, to solid cores, gradually extending its pharmacokinetic profiles in blood plasma to favor drug accumulation in breast tumor models. Consequently, the NPs with solid cores completely inhibit tumor growth in vivo, more effectively than those with full and semi-full cavities. Our work opens up a new avenue to the use of diffusion-mediated nanoscale carving in producing biomaterials with controllable interior topologies relevant to drug release profiles.
KW - All-natural biomaterials
KW - Cancer
KW - Interior topologies
KW - Nanoscale carving
KW - Protein nanoparticles
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85148327619&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2023.122027
DO - 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2023.122027
M3 - 文章
C2 - 36805237
AN - SCOPUS:85148327619
SN - 0142-9612
VL - 295
JO - Biomaterials
JF - Biomaterials
M1 - 122027
ER -