Enzyme-responsive vitamin D-based micelles for paclitaxel-controlled delivery and synergistic pancreatic cancer therapy.
1/5 보강
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains one of the most feared diseases worldwide owing to its poor prognosis, negligible therapeutic advances, and high mortality.
APA
Peixoto D, Ravasco JM, et al. (2025). Enzyme-responsive vitamin D-based micelles for paclitaxel-controlled delivery and synergistic pancreatic cancer therapy.. Materials today. Bio, 31, 101555. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mtbio.2025.101555
MLA
Peixoto D, et al.. "Enzyme-responsive vitamin D-based micelles for paclitaxel-controlled delivery and synergistic pancreatic cancer therapy.." Materials today. Bio, vol. 31, 2025, pp. 101555.
PMID
40026626
Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains one of the most feared diseases worldwide owing to its poor prognosis, negligible therapeutic advances, and high mortality. Herein, multifunctional enzyme-responsive micelles for the controlled delivery of paclitaxel (PTX) were prepared to circumvent its current clinical challenges. Accordingly, two enzyme-responsive structural units composed of Vitamin D (VD) conjugated with polyethylene glycol of different molecular weights (600 Da and 2000 Da) were synthesized and characterized using different analytical methods. By applying the solvent evaporation method, these bioactive structural units self-assembled into sub-100 nm VD micelles with minimal batch-to-batch variation, monomodal particle size distribution, and high encapsulation efficiency. The enzyme-triggered disassembly of PTX-loaded VD micelles was demonstrated by release studies in the presence of a high esterase content typically featured by PDAC cells. PTX-loaded VD micelles also exhibited prominent cell internalization and induced a considerable cytotoxic synergistic effect against human PDAC cells (BxPC-3 cells) in 2D and 3D cell culture models compared with free PTX. The PTX-loaded VD micelles were hemocompatible and stable after long-term storage in the presence of biorelevant media, and showed higher efficiency to inhibit the tumor growth compared to the approved clinical nanoformulation (Abraxane®) in an tumor model. The findings reported here indicate that VDS-PEG micelles may have a promising role in PDAC therapy, since VD could act not only as a hydrophobic core of the micelles but also as a therapeutic agent that provides synergetic therapeutic effects with the encapsulated PTX.