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Lipoproteins LDL versus HDL as nanocarriers to target either cancer cells or macrophages
Tarik Hadi, … , Carmen Garrido, Frederic Lirussi
Tarik Hadi, … , Carmen Garrido, Frederic Lirussi
Published November 30, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(24):e140280. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.140280.
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Research Article Oncology Therapeutics

Lipoproteins LDL versus HDL as nanocarriers to target either cancer cells or macrophages

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Abstract

In this work, we have explored natural unmodified low- and high-density lipoproteins (LDL and HDL, respectively) as selective delivery vectors in colorectal cancer therapy. We show in vitro in cultured cells and in vivo (NanoSPECT/CT) in the CT-26 mice colorectal cancer model that LDLs are mainly taken up by cancer cells, while HDLs are preferentially taken up by macrophages. We loaded LDLs with cisplatin and HDLs with the heat shock protein-70 inhibitor AC1LINNC, turning them into a pair of “Trojan horses” delivering drugs selectively to their target cells as demonstrated in vitro in human colorectal cancer cells and macrophages, and in vivo. Coupling of the drugs to lipoproteins and stability was assessed by mass spectometry and raman spectrometry analysis. Cisplatin vectorized in LDLs led to better tumor growth suppression with strongly reduced adverse effects such as renal or liver toxicity. AC1LINNC vectorized into HDLs induced a strong oxidative burst in macrophages and innate anticancer immune response. Cumulative antitumor effect was observed for both drug-loaded lipoproteins. Altogether, our data show that lipoproteins from patient blood can be used as natural nanocarriers allowing cell-specific targeting, paving the way toward more efficient, safer, and personalized use of chemotherapeutic and immunotherapeutic drugs in cancer.

Authors

Tarik Hadi, Christophe Ramseyer, Thomas Gautier, Pierre-Simon Bellaye, Tatiana Lopez, Antonin Schmitt, Sarah Foley, Semen Yesylevskyy, Thibault Minervini, Romain Douhard, Lucile Dondaine, Lil Proukhnitzky, Samir Messaoudi, Maeva Wendremaire, Mathieu Moreau, Fabrice Neiers, Bertrand Collin, Franck Denat, Laurent Lagrost, Carmen Garrido, Frederic Lirussi

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Figure 3

LDL-Bodipy accumulates in cancer cells, while HLD-Bodipy preferentially target macrophages.

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LDL-Bodipy accumulates in cancer cells, while HLD-Bodipy preferentially ...
(A) Tumor cells and macrophages were isolated by FACS from dissociated CT-26 tumors of mice that have received LDL- or HLD-Bodipy (100 μM cholesterol) 12 hours before. (B) Representative gating strategy by flow cytometry for macrophages (CD45+/CD11b+/F4/80+/Ly6G–) and stromal cells (CD45–). Percentages of Bodipy+ cancer cells (F4/80–, blue bars) and macrophages (F4/80+, red bars) are represented as mean value ± SEM. n = 4, ***P < 0.001. (C and D) Human colorectal HCT116 cancer cells (C) and human primary macrophages (D) were treated for 6 hours with LDL-Bodipy or HDL-Bodipy (100 μM cholesterol). Percentages of Bodipy+ cells are represented as mean values. n = 4, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001. P values were calculated using 2-tailed unpaired t tests.

Copyright © 2022 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN 2379-3708

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