Intensification of radiotherapy has been shown to be an effective way for improving the therapeutic efficacy of radiation sensitive malignancies such as esophageal cancer (EC). The application of DNA Bait (Dbait), a type of DNA repair inhibitor, is an emerging strategy for radiosensitization. In this study, a Eca-109 cancerous cytomembrane-cloaked biomimetic drug delivery system (DDS), CMEC-Dbait, was designed and successfully fabricated, for targeted delivery of Dbait. Our systematic evaluation demonstrated that the ingenious artificial gastrointestinal extracellular vesicle owns neat spherical structure, proper particle size (154.6±5.5 nm) and surface charge (2.6±0.3 mV), favourable biocompatibility and immunocompatibility, being conducive to drug delivery. Besides, Eca-109 cytomembrane coating endowed CMEC-Dbait with effective targeting ability to homologous EC cells. Owing to these advantages, the biomimetic DDS was proved to be a potent radiosensitizer , indicated by remarkably reduced cell viability and enhanced cellular apoptosis by the combination therapy of radiation and CMEC-Dbait. The result was validated using mouse xenograft models of EC, the results illustrated that radiotherapy plus CMEC-Dbait significantly suppressed tumor growth and prolonged survival of tumor bearing mice. Western blotting results showed that CMEC-Dbait can significantly inhibit DNA damage repair signaling pathways by simulating DNA double-strand breaks both and . In conclusion, the versatile biomimetic CMEC-Dbait was characterized of low toxicity, excellent biocompatibility and satisfactory drug delivery efficiency, which is confirmed to be an ideal radiosensitizer for homologous cancer and merits further investigation in both pre-clinical and clinical studies.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9906089 | PMC |
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