Bioinspired Adaptive Microdrugs Enhance the Chemotherapy of Malignant Glioma: Beyond Their Nanodrugs

Author:

Wang Xuejiao1,Hao Xiangrong1,Zhang Yangning1,Wu Qun1,Zhou Jiajia2,Cheng Zhongman1,Chen Jianping13,Liu Sijia1,Pan Jiahao1,Wang Ying1,Fan Jun‐Bing1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cancer Research Institute Experimental Education/Administration Center School of Basic Medical Sciences Southern Medical University Guangzhou 510515 P. R. China

2. South China Advanced Institute for Soft Matter Science and Technology School of Emergent Soft Matter South China University of Technology Guangzhou 510515 P. R. China

3. Department of Radiotherapy The Sixth Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University Qingyuan People's Hospital Qingyuan 511518 P. R. China

Abstract

AbstractSolid nanoparticle‐mediated drug delivery systems are usually confined to nanoscale due to the enhanced permeability and retention effect. However, they remain a great challenge for malignant glioma chemotherapy because of poor drug delivery efficiency and insufficient tumor penetration resulting from the blood–brain barrier/blood–brain tumor barrier (BBB/BBTB). Inspired by biological microparticles (e.g., cells) with excellent adaptive deformation, it is demonstrated that the adaptive microdrugs (even up to 3.0 µm in size) are more efficient than their nanodrugs (less than 200 nm in size) to cross BBB/BBTB and penetrate into tumor tissues, achieving highly efficient chemotherapy of malignant glioma. The distinct delivery of the adaptive microdrugs is mainly attributed to the enhanced interfacial binding and endocytosis via adaptive deformation. As expected, the obtained adaptive microdrugs exhibit enhanced accumulation, deep penetration, and cellular internalization into tumor tissues in comparison with nanodrugs, significantly improving the survival rate of glioblastoma mice. It is believed that the bioinspired adaptive microdrugs enable them to efficiently cross physiological barriers and deeply penetrate tumor tissues for drug delivery, providing an avenue for the treatment of solid tumors.

Funder

Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation of Guangdong Province

Innovative Research Group Project of the National Natural Science Foundation of China

Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project

Publisher

Wiley

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