New drug-delivering nanoparticles could help fight cancer
Researchers have now devised a new drug-delivering nanoparticle that could offer a better way to treat glioblastoma.
The particles, which carry two different drugs, are designed so that they can easily cross the blood-brain barrier and bind directly to tumor cells. One drug damages tumor cells’ DNA, while the other interferes with the systems cells normally use to repair such damage.
“What is unique here is we are not only able to use this mechanism to get across the blood-brain barrier and target tumors very effectively, we are using it to deliver this unique drug combination,”
says Paula Hammond, a David H. Koch Professor in Engineering, the head of MIT’s Department of Chemical Engineering.
Targeting the brain
These spherical droplets, known as liposomes, can carry one drug in their core and the other in their fatty outer shell.
Furthermore, transferrin also binds to proteins found on the surface of tumor cells, allowing the particles to accumulate directly at the tumor site while avoiding healthy brain cells.
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Temozolomide, which is usually the first chemotherapy drug given to glioblastoma patients, can cause bruising, nausea, and weakness, among other side effects.
Bromodomain inhibitors are believed to interfere with cells’ ability to repair DNA damage. By combining these two drugs, the researchers created a one-two punch that first disrupts tumor cells’ DNA repair mechanisms, then launches an attack on the cells’ DNA while their defenses are down.
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About 24 hours later, temozolomide is released from the particle core.
The mice treated with the transferrin-coated nanoparticles survived for twice as long as mice that received other treatments.
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says Michael Yaffe, a David H. Koch Professor of Science and member of the Koch Institute.
The particles are also coated with a polymer called polyethylene glycol (PEG), which helps protect the particles from being detected and broken down by the immune system.
PEG and all of the other components of the liposomes are already FDA-approved for use in humans.
“Our goal was to have something that could be easily translatable, by using simple, already approved synthetic components in the liposome,”
Lam says.
“This was really a proof-of-concept study [showing] that we can deliver novel combination therapies using a targeted nanoparticle system across the blood-brain barrier.”
“Because there’s such a short list of drugs that we can use in brain tumors, a vehicle that would allow us to use some of the more common chemotherapy regimens in brain tumors would be a real game-changer, maybe we could find efficacy for more standard chemotherapies if we can just get them to the right place by working around the blood-brain barrier with a tool like this.”
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