Assembly of Glycopeptides in Living Cells Resembling Viral Infection for Cargo Delivery

Author:

Tian Feng1,Guo Ruo‐Chen1,Wu Chunxia1,Liu Xin1,Zhang Zeyu1,Wang Yamei2,Wang Hao1,Li Gongyu2,Yu Zhilin13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Functional Polymer Materials, Ministry of Education, State Key Laboratory of Medicinal Chemical Biology, Institute of Polymer Chemistry, College of Chemistry Nankai University 94 Weijin Road Tianjin 300071 China

2. State Key Laboratory of Medicinal Chemical Biology, Research Center for Analytical Science and Tianjin Key Laboratory of Biosensing and Molecular Recognition, Frontiers Science Center for New Organic Matter, College of Chemistry Nankai University 94 Weijin Road Tianjin 300071 China

3. Haihe Laboratory of Synthetic Biology 21 West 15th Avenue Tianjin 300308 China

Abstract

AbstractSelf‐assembly in living cells represents one versatile strategy for drug delivery; however, it suffers from the limited precision and efficiency. Inspired by viral traits, we here report a cascade targeting‐hydrolysis‐transformation (THT) assembly of glycosylated peptides in living cells holistically resembling viral infection for efficient cargo delivery and combined tumor therapy. We design a glycosylated peptide via incorporating a β‐galactose‐serine residue into bola‐amphiphilic sequences. Co‐assembling of the glycosylated peptide with two counterparts containing irinotecan (IRI) or ligand TSFAEYWNLLSP (PMI) results in formation of the glycosylated co‐assemblies SgVEIP, which target cancer cells via β‐galactose‐galectin‐1 association and undergo galactosidase‐induced morphological transformation. While GSH‐reduction causes release of IRI from the co‐assemblies, the PMI moieties release p53 and facilitate cell death via binding with protein MDM2. Cellular experiments show membrane targeting, endo‐/lysosome‐mediated internalization and in situ formation of nanofibers in cytoplasm by SgVEIP. This cascade THT process enables efficient delivery of IRI and PMI into cancer cells secreting Gal‐1 and overexpressing β‐galactosidase. In vivo studies illustrate enhanced tumor accumulation and retention of the glycosylated co‐assemblies, thereby suppressing tumor growth. Our findings demonstrate an in situ assembly strategy mimicking viral infection, thus providing a new route for drug delivery and cancer therapy in the future.

Funder

Key Technologies Research and Development Program

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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