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A Small Peptide Increases Drug Delivery in Human Melanoma Cells

Melanoma is the most fatal type of skin cancer and is notoriously resistant to chemotherapies. The response of melanoma to current treatments is difficult to predict. To combat these challenges, in this study, we utilize a small peptide to increase drug delivery to melanoma cells. A peptide library...

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Autores principales: Tong, Shirley, Darwish, Shaban, Ariani, Hanieh Hossein Nejad, Lozada, Kate Alison, Salehi, David, Cinelli, Maris A., Silverman, Richard B., Kaur, Kamaljit, Yang, Sun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9145755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35631623
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14051036
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author Tong, Shirley
Darwish, Shaban
Ariani, Hanieh Hossein Nejad
Lozada, Kate Alison
Salehi, David
Cinelli, Maris A.
Silverman, Richard B.
Kaur, Kamaljit
Yang, Sun
author_facet Tong, Shirley
Darwish, Shaban
Ariani, Hanieh Hossein Nejad
Lozada, Kate Alison
Salehi, David
Cinelli, Maris A.
Silverman, Richard B.
Kaur, Kamaljit
Yang, Sun
author_sort Tong, Shirley
collection PubMed
description Melanoma is the most fatal type of skin cancer and is notoriously resistant to chemotherapies. The response of melanoma to current treatments is difficult to predict. To combat these challenges, in this study, we utilize a small peptide to increase drug delivery to melanoma cells. A peptide library array was designed and screened using a peptide array-whole cell binding assay, which identified KK-11 as a novel human melanoma-targeting peptide. The peptide and its D-amino acid substituted analogue (VPWxEPAYQrFL or D-aa KK-11) were synthesized via a solid-phase strategy. Further studies using FITC-labeled KK-11 demonstrated dose-dependent uptake in human melanoma cells. D-aa KK-11 significantly increased the stability of the peptide, with 45.3% remaining detectable after 24 h with human serum incubation. Co-treatment of KK-11 with doxorubicin was found to significantly enhance the cytotoxicity of doxorubicin compared to doxorubicin alone, or sequential KK-11 and doxorubicin treatment. In vivo and ex vivo imaging revealed that D-aa KK-11 distributed to xenografted A375 melanoma tumors as early as 5 min and persisted up to 24 h post tail vein injection. When co-administered, D-aa KK-11 significantly enhanced the anti-tumor activity of a novel nNOS inhibitor (MAC-3-190) in an A375 human melanoma xenograft mouse model compared to MAC-3-190 treatment alone. No apparent systemic toxicities were observed. Taken together, these results suggest that KK-11 may be a promising human melanoma-targeted delivery vector for anti-melanoma cargo.
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spelling pubmed-91457552022-05-29 A Small Peptide Increases Drug Delivery in Human Melanoma Cells Tong, Shirley Darwish, Shaban Ariani, Hanieh Hossein Nejad Lozada, Kate Alison Salehi, David Cinelli, Maris A. Silverman, Richard B. Kaur, Kamaljit Yang, Sun Pharmaceutics Article Melanoma is the most fatal type of skin cancer and is notoriously resistant to chemotherapies. The response of melanoma to current treatments is difficult to predict. To combat these challenges, in this study, we utilize a small peptide to increase drug delivery to melanoma cells. A peptide library array was designed and screened using a peptide array-whole cell binding assay, which identified KK-11 as a novel human melanoma-targeting peptide. The peptide and its D-amino acid substituted analogue (VPWxEPAYQrFL or D-aa KK-11) were synthesized via a solid-phase strategy. Further studies using FITC-labeled KK-11 demonstrated dose-dependent uptake in human melanoma cells. D-aa KK-11 significantly increased the stability of the peptide, with 45.3% remaining detectable after 24 h with human serum incubation. Co-treatment of KK-11 with doxorubicin was found to significantly enhance the cytotoxicity of doxorubicin compared to doxorubicin alone, or sequential KK-11 and doxorubicin treatment. In vivo and ex vivo imaging revealed that D-aa KK-11 distributed to xenografted A375 melanoma tumors as early as 5 min and persisted up to 24 h post tail vein injection. When co-administered, D-aa KK-11 significantly enhanced the anti-tumor activity of a novel nNOS inhibitor (MAC-3-190) in an A375 human melanoma xenograft mouse model compared to MAC-3-190 treatment alone. No apparent systemic toxicities were observed. Taken together, these results suggest that KK-11 may be a promising human melanoma-targeted delivery vector for anti-melanoma cargo. MDPI 2022-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9145755/ /pubmed/35631623 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14051036 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Tong, Shirley
Darwish, Shaban
Ariani, Hanieh Hossein Nejad
Lozada, Kate Alison
Salehi, David
Cinelli, Maris A.
Silverman, Richard B.
Kaur, Kamaljit
Yang, Sun
A Small Peptide Increases Drug Delivery in Human Melanoma Cells
title A Small Peptide Increases Drug Delivery in Human Melanoma Cells
title_full A Small Peptide Increases Drug Delivery in Human Melanoma Cells
title_fullStr A Small Peptide Increases Drug Delivery in Human Melanoma Cells
title_full_unstemmed A Small Peptide Increases Drug Delivery in Human Melanoma Cells
title_short A Small Peptide Increases Drug Delivery in Human Melanoma Cells
title_sort small peptide increases drug delivery in human melanoma cells
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9145755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35631623
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14051036
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