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Co-Delivery of erlotinib and resveratrol via nanostructured lipid Carriers: A synergistically promising approach for cell proliferation prevention and ROS-Mediated apoptosis activation.

Cancer treatments are always associated with various challenges, and scientists are constantly trying to find new therapies and methods. Erlotinib (ELT) is a well-known medicine against non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, treatments by ELT disrupt therapy due to drug resistance and pose severe challenges to patients. To achieve high-performance treatment, we gained nanostructured lipid carriers (NLCs) to evaluate synergistic anticancer effects of co-delivery of ELT and resveratrol (RES), a natural herbal derived phenol against NSCLC. NLCs are prepared via the hot homogenization method and characterized. In vitro cytotoxicity of formulations were evaluated on adenocarcinoma human alveolar basal epithelial (A549) cells. Prepared NLCs showed a narrow particle size (97.52 ± 17.14 nm), negative zeta potential (-7.67 ± 4.55 mV), and high encapsulation efficiency (EE%) was measured for the prepared co-delivery system (EE% 89.5 ± 5.16 % for ELT and 90.1 ± 6.61 % for RES). In vitro outcomes from cell viability study (12.63 % after 48 h of treatment), apoptosis assay (85.50%.), cell cycle (40.00% arrest in G2-M), and western blotting investigations (decreasing of protein expression levels of survivin, Bcl-2, P-Caspase 3P-caspase 9, and P-ERK 1/2, and additionally, increasing protein levels of BAX, P53, C-Caspase 3 and 9), DAPI staining, and colony formation assays showed the augment cytotoxic performances for co-delivery of ELT and RES loaded NLCs. Our study introduced the co-delivery of ELT and RES by NLCs as a novel strategy to elevate the efficacy of chemotherapeutics for NSCLC.

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