- Dendrimer-based micelles with highly potent targeting to sites of active bone turnover for the treatment of bone metastasis.
Dendrimer-based micelles with highly potent targeting to sites of active bone turnover for the treatment of bone metastasis.
Bone-drug targeting therapies using nanoparticles based on targeting ligands remain challenging due to their uptake clearance at non-target sites such as the liver, kidney, and spleen. Furthermore, the distribution sites of nanoparticles in bones have not been fully investigated, thus halting the development of more effective bone metastasis treatment strategies. In this study, we developed nanoparticles self-assembled from cholesterol-terminated, polyethylene glycol-conjugated, aspartic acid (Asp)-modified polyamidoamine dendrimer (Asp-PAMAM-Micelles) with targeting to active bone turnover sites associated with bone metastasis pathogenesis. On analysis through whole-body single photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) imaging, 111In-Asp-PAMAM-Micelles showed high specificity to active bone turnover sites (especially the joints in the lower limbs, shoulder, and pelvis) after intravenous injection in mice. The lower limb bone uptake clearance for 111In-Asp-PAMAM-Micelles encapsulating paclitaxel (PTX) was 3.5-fold higher than that for 111In-unmodified PAMAM-Micelles (PTX). 3H-PTX encapsulated Asp-PAMAM-Micelles effectively accumulated in the lower limb bones in a similar manner as the 111In-Asp-PAMAM-Micelles (PTX). In a bone metastatic tumor mouse model, the tumor growth in the lower limb bones was significantly inhibited by injection of Asp-PAMAM-Micelles (PTX) compared to unmodified PAMAM-Micelles (PTX). Our results demonstrate that Asp-PAMAM-Micelles are sophisticated drug delivery systems for highly potent targeting to active bone turnover sites.