logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Cholesterol-modified sphingomyelin chimeric lipid bilayer for improved therapeutic delivery

Medicine and Health

Cholesterol-modified sphingomyelin chimeric lipid bilayer for improved therapeutic delivery

Z. Wang, W. Li, et al.

Discover how a novel Chol-modified sphingomyelin lipid bilayer can revolutionize drug delivery! This promising platform, developed by Zhiren Wang, Wenpan Li, Yanhao Jiang, Jonghan Park, Karina Marie Gonzalez, Xiangmeng Wu, Qing-Yu Zhang, and Jianqin Lu, enhances therapeutic efficacy while minimizing premature payload leakage. Explore its potential to significantly improve treatment across various cancer models.... show more
Abstract
Cholesterol (Chol) fortifies packing and reduces fluidity and permeability of the lipid bilayer in vesicles (liposomes)-mediated drug delivery. However, under the physiological environment, Chol is rapidly extracted from the lipid bilayer by biomembranes, which jeopardizes membrane stability and results in premature leakage for delivered payloads, yielding suboptimal clinic efficacy. Herein, we report a Chol-modified sphingomyelin (SM) lipid bilayer via covalently conjugating Chol to SM (SM-Chol), which retains membrane condensing ability of Chol. Systemic structure activity relationship screening demonstrates that SM-Chol with a disulfide bond and longer linker outperforms other counterparts and conventional phospholipids/Chol mixture systems on blocking Chol transfer and payload leakage, increases maximum tolerated dose of vincristine while reducing systemic toxicities, improves pharmacokinetics and tumor delivery efficiency, and enhances antitumor efficacy in SU-DHL-4 diffuse large B-cell lymphoma xenograft model in female mice. Furthermore, SM-Chol improves therapeutic delivery of structurally diversified therapeutic agents (irinotecan, doxorubicin, dexamethasone) or siRNA targeting multi-drug resistant gene (p-glycoprotein) in late-stage metastatic orthotopic KPC-Luc pancreas cancer, 4T1-Luc2 triple negative breast cancer, lung inflammation, and CT26 colorectal cancer animal models in female mice compared to respective FDA-approved nanotherapeutics or lipid compositions. Thus, SM-Chol represents a promising platform for universal and improved drug delivery.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Mar 07, 2024
Authors
Zhiren Wang, Wenpan Li, Yanhao Jiang, Jonghan Park, Karina Marie Gonzalez, Xiangmeng Wu, Qing-Yu Zhang, Jianqin Lu
Tags
cholesterol
lipid bilayer
drug delivery
vincristine
antitumor efficacy
pharmacokinetics
sphingomyelin
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny