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Engineering hepatitis B virus core particles for targeting HER2 receptors in vitro and in vivo

Hepatitis B Virus core (HBc) particles have been studied for their potential as drug delivery vehicles for cancer therapy. HBc particles are hollow nano-particles of 30–34 nm diameter and 7 nm thick envelopes, consisting of 180–240 units of 21 kDa core monomers. They have the capacity to assemble/di...

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Autores principales: Mohamed Suffian, Izzat Fahimuddin Bin, Wang, Julie Tzu-Wen, Hodgins, Naomi O., Klippstein, Rebecca, Garcia-Maya, Mitla, Brown, Paul, Nishimura, Yuya, Heidari, Hamed, Bals, Sara, Sosabowski, Jane K., Ogino, Chiaki, Kondo, Akihiko, Al-Jamal, Khuloud T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5300899/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28056402
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2016.12.012
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author Mohamed Suffian, Izzat Fahimuddin Bin
Wang, Julie Tzu-Wen
Hodgins, Naomi O.
Klippstein, Rebecca
Garcia-Maya, Mitla
Brown, Paul
Nishimura, Yuya
Heidari, Hamed
Bals, Sara
Sosabowski, Jane K.
Ogino, Chiaki
Kondo, Akihiko
Al-Jamal, Khuloud T.
author_facet Mohamed Suffian, Izzat Fahimuddin Bin
Wang, Julie Tzu-Wen
Hodgins, Naomi O.
Klippstein, Rebecca
Garcia-Maya, Mitla
Brown, Paul
Nishimura, Yuya
Heidari, Hamed
Bals, Sara
Sosabowski, Jane K.
Ogino, Chiaki
Kondo, Akihiko
Al-Jamal, Khuloud T.
author_sort Mohamed Suffian, Izzat Fahimuddin Bin
collection PubMed
description Hepatitis B Virus core (HBc) particles have been studied for their potential as drug delivery vehicles for cancer therapy. HBc particles are hollow nano-particles of 30–34 nm diameter and 7 nm thick envelopes, consisting of 180–240 units of 21 kDa core monomers. They have the capacity to assemble/dis-assemble in a controlled manner allowing encapsulation of various drugs and other biomolecules. Moreover, other functional motifs, i.e. receptors, receptor binding sequences, peptides and proteins can be expressed. This study focuses on the development of genetically modified HBc particles to specifically recognise and target human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 (HER2)-expressing cancer cells, in vitro and in vivo, for future cancer therapy. The non-specific binding capacity of wild type HBc particles was reduced by genetic deletion of the sequence encoding arginine-rich domains. A specific HER2-targeting was achieved by expressing the Z(HER2) affibodies on the HBc particles surface. In vitro studies showed specific uptake of Z(HER2)-ΔHBc particles in HER2 expressing cancer cells. In vivo studies confirmed positive uptake of Z(HER2)-ΔHBc particles in HER2-expressing tumours, compared to non-targeted ΔHBc particles in intraperitoneal tumour-bearing mice models. The present results highlight the potential of these nanocarriers in targeting HER2-positive metastatic abdominal cancer following intra-peritoneal administration.
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spelling pubmed-53008992017-03-01 Engineering hepatitis B virus core particles for targeting HER2 receptors in vitro and in vivo Mohamed Suffian, Izzat Fahimuddin Bin Wang, Julie Tzu-Wen Hodgins, Naomi O. Klippstein, Rebecca Garcia-Maya, Mitla Brown, Paul Nishimura, Yuya Heidari, Hamed Bals, Sara Sosabowski, Jane K. Ogino, Chiaki Kondo, Akihiko Al-Jamal, Khuloud T. Biomaterials Article Hepatitis B Virus core (HBc) particles have been studied for their potential as drug delivery vehicles for cancer therapy. HBc particles are hollow nano-particles of 30–34 nm diameter and 7 nm thick envelopes, consisting of 180–240 units of 21 kDa core monomers. They have the capacity to assemble/dis-assemble in a controlled manner allowing encapsulation of various drugs and other biomolecules. Moreover, other functional motifs, i.e. receptors, receptor binding sequences, peptides and proteins can be expressed. This study focuses on the development of genetically modified HBc particles to specifically recognise and target human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 (HER2)-expressing cancer cells, in vitro and in vivo, for future cancer therapy. The non-specific binding capacity of wild type HBc particles was reduced by genetic deletion of the sequence encoding arginine-rich domains. A specific HER2-targeting was achieved by expressing the Z(HER2) affibodies on the HBc particles surface. In vitro studies showed specific uptake of Z(HER2)-ΔHBc particles in HER2 expressing cancer cells. In vivo studies confirmed positive uptake of Z(HER2)-ΔHBc particles in HER2-expressing tumours, compared to non-targeted ΔHBc particles in intraperitoneal tumour-bearing mice models. The present results highlight the potential of these nanocarriers in targeting HER2-positive metastatic abdominal cancer following intra-peritoneal administration. Elsevier Science 2017-03 /pmc/articles/PMC5300899/ /pubmed/28056402 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2016.12.012 Text en © 2016 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mohamed Suffian, Izzat Fahimuddin Bin
Wang, Julie Tzu-Wen
Hodgins, Naomi O.
Klippstein, Rebecca
Garcia-Maya, Mitla
Brown, Paul
Nishimura, Yuya
Heidari, Hamed
Bals, Sara
Sosabowski, Jane K.
Ogino, Chiaki
Kondo, Akihiko
Al-Jamal, Khuloud T.
Engineering hepatitis B virus core particles for targeting HER2 receptors in vitro and in vivo
title Engineering hepatitis B virus core particles for targeting HER2 receptors in vitro and in vivo
title_full Engineering hepatitis B virus core particles for targeting HER2 receptors in vitro and in vivo
title_fullStr Engineering hepatitis B virus core particles for targeting HER2 receptors in vitro and in vivo
title_full_unstemmed Engineering hepatitis B virus core particles for targeting HER2 receptors in vitro and in vivo
title_short Engineering hepatitis B virus core particles for targeting HER2 receptors in vitro and in vivo
title_sort engineering hepatitis b virus core particles for targeting her2 receptors in vitro and in vivo
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5300899/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28056402
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2016.12.012
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