Surface-engineered dual drug-loaded tumor-targeted liposomal nanoparticles to overcome the therapeutic resistance in glioblastoma multiforme
Abstract
Background Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common high-grade primary malignant brain tumor, characterized by a notably poor prognosis. Current treatments for GBM have shown limited effectiveness in improving patient survival, highlighting the urgent need for novel therapeutic strategies. Combination therapy offers significant potential in overcoming resistance by targeting multiple signaling pathways; however, it often comes with increased toxicity compared to monotherapy. Co-encapsulating multiple therapeutic agents into a tumor-targeted drug delivery platform holds promise for overcoming these limitations and improving treatment outcomes. Methods We developed a tumor-targeted liposomal nanoformulation (TTL) using phospholipids, cholesterol, DSPE-(PEG)2000-OMe, and a proprietary tumor-targeting peptide (TTP). The TTL was loaded with everolimus (TTL-E), vinorelbine (TTL-V), rapamycin (TTL-R), a combination (TTL-EV), or (TTL-RV). These formulations were tested in vivo on orthotopic GBM mice, combined with temozolomide and radiation. RNA sequencing was performed to identify molecular and transcriptome changes post-treatment. Results TTL demonstrated tumor-specific uptake, effectively delivering drugs to GBM tumors. TTL-EV and TTL-RV outperformed single-drug formulations. Radiation combined with TTL-EV/RV improved tumor growth inhibition and survival, while temozolomide provided minimal benefit. Transcriptome analysis revealed differentially expressed genes (DEGs) linked to DNA damage repair, cell cycle, metabolism, and extracellular matrix pathways. Conclusion TTL crossed the blood-brain barrier, targeting tumors effectively. Radiation plus TTL-EV/RV enhanced tumor suppression and survival in GBM models. Gene expression analysis identified DEGs related to DNA damage and cell death. Mechanistic studies suggest TTL-EV plus radiation inhibits mTOR/MAPK pathways and sensitizes tumors to radiation. These findings offer a potential approach for improving GBM treatment.
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