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Photochemically-Induced Release of Lysosomal Sequestered Sunitinib: Obstacles for Therapeutic Efficacy. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explores how photochemical internalization (PCI) can potentially activate sunitinib, a cancer drug that accumulates in lysosomes, which is associated with drug resistance in colon cancer cells.
  • Using advanced microscopy, researchers found that sunitinib and a photosensitizer accumulated together in lysosomal membranes, and PCI enhanced the drug's effects in certain colon cancer cell lines.
  • However, while PCI reduced sunitinib accumulation in resistant cells, it did not overcome their resistance, nor did it significantly improve tumor growth outcomes in mouse models, indicating complex interactions at play in treatment efficacy.

Article Abstract

Lysosomal accumulation of sunitinib has been suggested as an underlying mechanism of resistance. Here, we investigated if photochemical internalization (PCI), a technology for cytosolic release of drugs entrapped in endosomes and lysosomes, would activate lysosomal sequestered sunitinib. By super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, sunitinib was found to accumulate in the membrane of endo/lysosomal compartments together with the photosensitizer disulfonated tetraphenylchlorin (TPCS). Furthermore, the treatment effect was potentiated by PCI in the human HT-29 and the mouse CT26.WT colon cancer cell lines. The cytotoxic outcome of sunitinib-PCI was, however, highly dependent on the treatment protocol. Thus, neoadjuvant PCI inhibited lysosomal accumulation of sunitinib. PCI also inhibited lysosomal sequestering of sunitinib in HT29/SR cells with acquired sunitinib resistance, but did not reverse the resistance. The mechanism of acquired sunitinib resistance in HT29/SR cells was therefore not related to lysosomal sequestering. Sunitinib-PCI was further evaluated on HT-29 xenografts in athymic mice, but was found to induce only a minor effect on tumor growth delay. In immunocompetent mice sunitinib-PCI enhanced areas of treatment-induced necrosis compared to the monotherapy groups. However, the tumor growth was not delayed, and decreased infiltration of CD3-positive T cells was indicated as a possible mechanism behind the failed overall response.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7072415PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12020417DOI Listing

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