2 research outputs found
Sprayable Adhesive Nanotherapeutics: Mussel-Protein-Based Nanoparticles for Highly Efficient Locoregional Cancer Therapy
Following
surgical resection for primary treatment of solid tumors,
systemic chemotherapy is commonly used to eliminate residual cancer
cells to prevent tumor recurrence. However, its clinical outcome is
often limited due to insufficient local accumulation and the systemic
toxicity of anticancer drugs. Here, we propose a sprayable adhesive
nanoparticle (NP)-based drug delivery system using a bioengineered
mussel adhesive protein (MAP) for effective locoregional cancer therapy.
The MAP NPs could be administered to target surfaces in a surface-independent
manner through a simple and easy spray process by virtue of their
unique adhesion ability and sufficient dispersion property. Doxorubicin
(DOX)-loaded MAP NPs (MAP@DOX NPs) exhibited efficient cellular uptake,
endolysosomal trafficking, and subsequent low pH microenvironment-induced
DOX release in cancer cells. The locally sprayed MAP@DOX NPs showed
a significant inhibition of tumor growth <i>in vivo</i>,
resulting from the prolonged retention of the MAP@DOX NPs on the tumor
surface. Thus, this adhesive MAP NP-based spray therapeutic system
provides a promising approach for topical drug delivery in adjuvant
cancer therapy
Surface-Independent Antibacterial Coating Using Silver Nanoparticle-Generating Engineered Mussel Glue
During
implant surgeries, antibacterial agents are needed to prevent bacterial
infections, which can cause the formation of biofilms between implanted
materials and tissue. Mussel adhesive proteins (MAPs) derived from
marine mussels are bioadhesives that show strong adhesion and coating
ability on various surfaces even in wet environment. Here, we proposed
a novel surface-independent antibacterial coating strategy based on
the fusion of MAP to a silver-binding peptide, which can synthesize
silver nanoparticles having broad antibacterial activity. This sticky
recombinant fusion protein enabled the efficient coating on target
surface and the easy generation of silver nanoparticles on the coated-surface
under mild condition. The biosynthesized silver nanoparticles showed
excellent antibacterial efficacy against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative
bacteria and also revealed good cytocompatibility with mammalian cells.
In this coating strategy, MAP-silver binding peptide fusion proteins
provide hybrid environment incorporating inorganic silver nanoparticle
and simultaneously mediate the interaction of silver nanoparticle
with surroundings. Moreover, the silver nanoparticles were fully synthesized
on various surfaces including metal, plastic, and glass by a simple,
surface-independent coating manner, and they were also successfully
synthesized on a nanofiber surface fabricated by electrospinning of
the fusion protein. Thus, this facile surface-independent silver nanoparticle-generating
antibacterial coating has great potential to be used for the prevention
of bacterial infection in diverse biomedical fields