Abstract

Tumor-targeting strategies for nanoparticles have been predominantly based on optimization of physical properties or conjugation with biological ligands. However, their tumor-targeting abilities remain limited and insufficient. Furthermore, traditional biological binding molecules have intrinsic limitations originating from the limited amount of cellular receptors and the heterogeneity of tumor cells. Our two-step <i>in vivo</i> tumor-targeting strategy for nanoparticles is based on metabolic glycoengineering and click chemistry. First, an intravenous injection of precursor-loaded glycol chitosan nanoparticles generates azide groups on tumor tissue specifically by the enhanced permeation and retention (EPR) effect followed by metabolic glycoengineering. These ‘receptor-like’ chemical groups then enhance the tumor-targeting ability of drug-containing nanoparticles by copper-free click chemistry <i>in vivo</i> during a second intravenous injection. The advantage of this protocol over traditional binding molecules is that there are significantly more binding molecules on the surface of most tumor cells regardless of cell type. The subsequent enhanced tumor-targeting ability can significantly enhance the cancer therapeutic efficacy in animal studies

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions