JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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An ATP-Responsive Codelivery System of Doxorubicin and MiR-34a To Synergistically Inhibit Cell Proliferation and Migration.

Establishing stimulus-responsive nanosystems for the codelivery of anticancer drug and oligonucleotide is a promising strategy in cancer treatment owing to the combination of chemotherapy and gene therapy in a synergistic manner. Herein, an ATP aptamer and its cDNA sequence were first hybridized to produce the duplex, into which chemotherapeutic agent doxorubicin (DOX) interacted through the GC-rich motif of duplex, and PEI25K was then employed as a carrier to condense the DOX-loading duplex and miR-34a to construct the ternary nanocomplex PEI/DOX-Duplex/miR-34a. The nanocomplex exhibited a favorable drug release profile through the response to high concentration of ATP in the cytosol. The ATP-responsive delivery system was demonstrated to possess higher antiproliferative effect (cell viability of <40%) than the single cargo delivery, which could be attributed to the synergistic induction of cell apoptosis and cell cycle arrest from DOX and miR-34a. Furthermore, wound healing and Transwell assay elucidated the higher antimigration effect of ternary nanocomplex than DOX-Duplex or miR-34a delivery. Overall, the combinatorial delivery of DOX and miR-34a through an ATP-responsive manner could trigger the rapid release of cargoes in the cytosol and enhance the inhibition of cell proliferation and migration through the synergistic manner of these two components.

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