TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-assembling A6K peptide nanotubes as a mercaptoundecahydrododecaborate (BSH) delivery system for boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT)
AU - Michiue, Hiroyuki
AU - Kitamatsu, Mizuki
AU - Fukunaga, Asami
AU - Tsuboi, Nobushige
AU - Fujimura, Atsushi
AU - Matsushita, Hiroaki
AU - Igawa, Kazuyo
AU - Kasai, Tomonari
AU - Kondo, Natsuko
AU - Matsui, Hideki
AU - Furuya, Shuichi
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by a Grant-in-aid for Takeda Science Foundation, Nakatani Foundation for Advancement of Measuring Technologies in Biomedical Engineering, Scientific Research KAKENHI ( 18K07324 and 15K10333 ) from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, Takeda Science Foundation and Scientific . This research was funded by the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED) ( 18072932 ) to A.F. We are grateful to 3-D Matrix, Ltd. for giving us A6K peptide for research use and a research grant for our future projects.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Authors
PY - 2021/2/10
Y1 - 2021/2/10
N2 - Boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) is a tumor selective therapy, the effectiveness of which depends on sufficient 10B delivery to and accumulation in tumors. In this study, we used self-assembling A6K peptide nanotubes as boron carriers and prepared new boron agents by simple mixing of A6K and BSH. BSH has been used to treat malignant glioma patients in clinical trials and its drug safety and availability have been confirmed; however, its contribution to BNCT efficacy is low. A6K nanotube delivery improved two major limitations of BSH, including absence of intracellular transduction and non-specific drug delivery to tumor tissue. Varying the A6K peptide and BSH mixture ratio produced materials with different morphologies—determined by electron microscopy—and intracellular transduction efficiencies. We investigated the A6K/BSH 1:10 mixture ratio and found high intracellular boron uptake with no toxicity. Microscopy observation showed intracellular localization of A6K/BSH in the perinuclear region and endosome in human glioma cells. The intracellular boron concentration using A6K/BSH was almost 10 times higher than that of BSH. The systematic administration of A6K/BSH via mouse tail vein showed tumor specific accumulation in a mouse brain tumor model with immunohistochemistry and pharmacokinetic study. Neutron irradiation of glioma cells treated with A6K/BSH showed the inhibition of cell proliferation in a colony formation assay. Boron delivery using A6K peptide provides a unique and simple strategy for next generation BNCT drugs.
AB - Boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) is a tumor selective therapy, the effectiveness of which depends on sufficient 10B delivery to and accumulation in tumors. In this study, we used self-assembling A6K peptide nanotubes as boron carriers and prepared new boron agents by simple mixing of A6K and BSH. BSH has been used to treat malignant glioma patients in clinical trials and its drug safety and availability have been confirmed; however, its contribution to BNCT efficacy is low. A6K nanotube delivery improved two major limitations of BSH, including absence of intracellular transduction and non-specific drug delivery to tumor tissue. Varying the A6K peptide and BSH mixture ratio produced materials with different morphologies—determined by electron microscopy—and intracellular transduction efficiencies. We investigated the A6K/BSH 1:10 mixture ratio and found high intracellular boron uptake with no toxicity. Microscopy observation showed intracellular localization of A6K/BSH in the perinuclear region and endosome in human glioma cells. The intracellular boron concentration using A6K/BSH was almost 10 times higher than that of BSH. The systematic administration of A6K/BSH via mouse tail vein showed tumor specific accumulation in a mouse brain tumor model with immunohistochemistry and pharmacokinetic study. Neutron irradiation of glioma cells treated with A6K/BSH showed the inhibition of cell proliferation in a colony formation assay. Boron delivery using A6K peptide provides a unique and simple strategy for next generation BNCT drugs.
KW - A6K peptide
KW - Boron drug
KW - Boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT)
KW - Drug delivery system (DDS)
KW - Malignant brain tumor
KW - Peptide nanotube
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jconrel.2020.11.001
DO - 10.1016/j.jconrel.2020.11.001
M3 - Article
C2 - 33188824
AN - SCOPUS:85099522215
SN - 0168-3659
VL - 330
SP - 788
EP - 796
JO - Journal of Controlled Release
JF - Journal of Controlled Release
ER -