1. Academic Validation
  2. Modular Nanoparticulate Prodrug Design Enables Efficient Treatment of Solid Tumors Using Bioorthogonal Activation

Modular Nanoparticulate Prodrug Design Enables Efficient Treatment of Solid Tumors Using Bioorthogonal Activation

  • ACS Nano. 2018 Dec 26;12(12):12814-12826. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.8b07954.
Miles A Miller 1 2 Hannes Mikula 1 3 Gaurav Luthria 1 4 Ran Li 1 Stefan Kronister 3 Mark Prytyskach 1 Rainer H Kohler 1 Timothy Mitchison 5 Ralph Weissleder 1 2 5
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Center for Systems Biology , Massachusetts General Hospital , Boston , Massachusetts 02114 , United States.
  • 2 Department of Radiology , Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School , Boston , Massachusetts 02114 , United States.
  • 3 Institute of Applied Synthetic Chemistry , Vienna University of Technology (TU Wien) , Vienna 1060 , Austria.
  • 4 Department of Biomedical Informatics , Harvard Medical School , Boston , Massachusetts 02115 , United States.
  • 5 Department of Systems Biology , Harvard Medical School , Boston , Massachusetts 02115 , United States.
Abstract

Prodrug strategies that facilitate localized and controlled activity of small-molecule therapeutics can reduce systemic exposure and improve pharmacokinetics, yet limitations in activation chemistry have made it difficult to assign tunable multifunctionality to prodrugs. Here, we present the design and application of a modular small-molecule caging strategy that couples bioorthogonal cleavage with a self-immolative linker and an aliphatic anchor. This strategy leverages recently discovered in vivo catalysis by a nanoencapsulated palladium compound (Pd-NP), which mediates alloxylcarbamate cleavage and triggers release of the activated drug. The aliphatic anchor enables >90% nanoencapsulation efficiency of the prodrug, while also allowing >104-fold increased cytotoxicity upon prodrug activation. We apply the strategy to a prodrug formulation of monomethyl Auristatin E (MMAE), demonstrating its ability to target microtubules and kill Cancer cells only after selective activation by Pd-NP. Computational pharmacokinetic modeling provides a mechanistic basis for the observation that the nanotherapeutic prodrug strategy can lead to more selective activation in the tumor, yet in a manner that is more sensitive to variable enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effects. Combination treatment with the nanoencapsulated MMAE prodrug and Pd-NP safely blocks tumor growth, especially when combined with a local radiation therapy regimen that is known to improve EPR effects, and represents a conceptual step forward in prodrug design.

Keywords

doxorubicin; drug delivery; macrophage; mononuclear phagocyte system; neo-adjuvant tumor priming; systems pharmacology; translational nanomedicine.

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