Effective
new therapies for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC)
are desperately needed as the prognosis of PDAC patients is dismal
and treatment remains a major challenge. Gemcitabine (GEM) is commonly
used to treat PDAC; however, the clinical use of GEM has been greatly
compromised by its low delivery efficacy and drug resistance. Here,
we describe a very simple yet cost-effective approach that synergistically
combines drug reconstitution, supramolecular nanoassembly, and tumor-specific
targeting to address the multiple challenges posed by the delivery
of the chemotherapeutic drug GEM. Using our developed PUFAylation
technology, the GEM prodrug was able to spontaneously self-assemble
into colloidal stable nanoparticles with sub-100 nm size on covalent
attachment of hydrophobic linoleic acid via amide linkage. The prodrug
nanoassemblies could be further refined by PEGylation and PDAC-specific
peptide ligand for preclinical studies. In vitro cell-based assays
showed that not only were GEM nanoparticles superior to free GEM but
also the decoration with PDAC-homing peptide facilitated the intracellular
uptake of nanoparticles and thereby augmented the cytotoxic activity.
In two separate xenograft models of human PDAC, one of which was a
patient-derived xenograft model, the administration of targeted nanoparticles
resulted in marked inhibition of tumor progression as well as alleviated
systemic toxicity. Together, these data unequivocally confirm that
the hydrophilic and rapidly metabolized drug GEM can be feasibly transformed
into a pharmacologically efficient nanomedicine through exploiting
the PUFAylation technology. This strategy could also potentially be
applied to rescue many other therapeutics that show unfavorable outcomes
in the preclinical studies because of pharmacologic obstacles