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Development of WRAP5 Peptide Complexes for Targeted Drug/Gene Co-Delivery toward Glioblastoma Therapy

Despite the great progress over the past few decades in both the diagnosis and treatment of a great variety of human cancers, glioblastoma remains the most lethal brain tumor. In recent years, cancer gene therapy focused on non-viral vectors which emerged as a promising approach to glioblastoma trea...

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Autores principales: Neves, Ana Raquel, Albuquerque, Tânia, Faria, Rúben, Gonçalves, Ana M., Santos, Cecília, Vivès, Eric, Boisguérin, Prisca, Passarinha, Luís A., Sousa, Ângela, Costa, Diana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9607428/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36297647
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14102213
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author Neves, Ana Raquel
Albuquerque, Tânia
Faria, Rúben
Gonçalves, Ana M.
Santos, Cecília
Vivès, Eric
Boisguérin, Prisca
Passarinha, Luís A.
Sousa, Ângela
Costa, Diana
author_facet Neves, Ana Raquel
Albuquerque, Tânia
Faria, Rúben
Gonçalves, Ana M.
Santos, Cecília
Vivès, Eric
Boisguérin, Prisca
Passarinha, Luís A.
Sousa, Ângela
Costa, Diana
author_sort Neves, Ana Raquel
collection PubMed
description Despite the great progress over the past few decades in both the diagnosis and treatment of a great variety of human cancers, glioblastoma remains the most lethal brain tumor. In recent years, cancer gene therapy focused on non-viral vectors which emerged as a promising approach to glioblastoma treatment. Transferrin (Tf) easily penetrates brain cells of the blood–brain barrier, and its receptor is highly expressed in this barrier and glioblastoma cells. Therefore, the development of delivery systems containing Tf appears as a reliable strategy to improve their brain cells targeting ability and cellular uptake. In this work, a cell-penetrating peptide (WRAP5), bearing a Tf-targeting sequence, has been exploited to condense tumor suppressor p53-encoding plasmid DNA (pDNA) for the development of nanocomplexes. To increase the functionality of developed nanocomplexes, the drug Temozolomide (TMZ) was also incorporated into the formulations. The physicochemical properties of peptide/pDNA complexes were revealed to be dependent on the nitrogen to phosphate groups ratio and can be optimized to promote efficient cellular internalization. A confocal microscopy study showed the capacity of developed complexes for efficient glioblastoma cell transfection and consequent pDNA delivery into the nucleus, where efficient gene expression took place, followed by p53 protein production. Of promise, these peptide/pDNA complexes induced a significant decrease in the viability of glioblastoma cells. The set of data reported significantly support further in vitro research to evaluate the therapeutic potential of developed complexes against glioblastoma.
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spelling pubmed-96074282022-10-28 Development of WRAP5 Peptide Complexes for Targeted Drug/Gene Co-Delivery toward Glioblastoma Therapy Neves, Ana Raquel Albuquerque, Tânia Faria, Rúben Gonçalves, Ana M. Santos, Cecília Vivès, Eric Boisguérin, Prisca Passarinha, Luís A. Sousa, Ângela Costa, Diana Pharmaceutics Article Despite the great progress over the past few decades in both the diagnosis and treatment of a great variety of human cancers, glioblastoma remains the most lethal brain tumor. In recent years, cancer gene therapy focused on non-viral vectors which emerged as a promising approach to glioblastoma treatment. Transferrin (Tf) easily penetrates brain cells of the blood–brain barrier, and its receptor is highly expressed in this barrier and glioblastoma cells. Therefore, the development of delivery systems containing Tf appears as a reliable strategy to improve their brain cells targeting ability and cellular uptake. In this work, a cell-penetrating peptide (WRAP5), bearing a Tf-targeting sequence, has been exploited to condense tumor suppressor p53-encoding plasmid DNA (pDNA) for the development of nanocomplexes. To increase the functionality of developed nanocomplexes, the drug Temozolomide (TMZ) was also incorporated into the formulations. The physicochemical properties of peptide/pDNA complexes were revealed to be dependent on the nitrogen to phosphate groups ratio and can be optimized to promote efficient cellular internalization. A confocal microscopy study showed the capacity of developed complexes for efficient glioblastoma cell transfection and consequent pDNA delivery into the nucleus, where efficient gene expression took place, followed by p53 protein production. Of promise, these peptide/pDNA complexes induced a significant decrease in the viability of glioblastoma cells. The set of data reported significantly support further in vitro research to evaluate the therapeutic potential of developed complexes against glioblastoma. MDPI 2022-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9607428/ /pubmed/36297647 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14102213 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
Neves, Ana Raquel
Albuquerque, Tânia
Faria, Rúben
Gonçalves, Ana M.
Santos, Cecília
Vivès, Eric
Boisguérin, Prisca
Passarinha, Luís A.
Sousa, Ângela
Costa, Diana
Development of WRAP5 Peptide Complexes for Targeted Drug/Gene Co-Delivery toward Glioblastoma Therapy
title Development of WRAP5 Peptide Complexes for Targeted Drug/Gene Co-Delivery toward Glioblastoma Therapy
title_full Development of WRAP5 Peptide Complexes for Targeted Drug/Gene Co-Delivery toward Glioblastoma Therapy
title_fullStr Development of WRAP5 Peptide Complexes for Targeted Drug/Gene Co-Delivery toward Glioblastoma Therapy
title_full_unstemmed Development of WRAP5 Peptide Complexes for Targeted Drug/Gene Co-Delivery toward Glioblastoma Therapy
title_short Development of WRAP5 Peptide Complexes for Targeted Drug/Gene Co-Delivery toward Glioblastoma Therapy
title_sort development of wrap5 peptide complexes for targeted drug/gene co-delivery toward glioblastoma therapy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9607428/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36297647
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14102213
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