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Pharmacophore hybridisation and nanoscale assembly to discover self-delivering lysosomotropic new-chemical entities for cancer therapy

Author

Listed:
  • Zhao Ma

    (University of California Davis
    Shandong University)

  • Jin Li

    (University of California Davis)

  • Kai Lin

    (University of California Davis)

  • Mythili Ramachandran

    (University of California Davis)

  • Dalin Zhang

    (University of California Davis)

  • Megan Showalter

    (University of California Davis)

  • Cristabelle Souza

    (University of California Davis)

  • Aaron Lindstrom

    (University of California Davis)

  • Lucas N. Solano

    (University of California Davis)

  • Bei Jia

    (University of California Davis)

  • Shiro Urayama

    (University of California Davis)

  • Yuyou Duan

    (South China University of Technology)

  • Oliver Fiehn

    (University of California Davis)

  • Tzu-yin Lin

    (University of California Davis)

  • Minyong Li

    (Shandong University
    Shandong University)

  • Yuanpei Li

    (University of California Davis)

Abstract

Integration of the unique advantages of the fields of drug discovery and drug delivery is invaluable for the advancement of drug development. Here we propose a self-delivering one-component new-chemical-entity nanomedicine (ONN) strategy to improve cancer therapy through incorporation of the self-assembly principle into drug design. A lysosomotropic detergent (MSDH) and an autophagy inhibitor (Lys05) are hybridised to develop bisaminoquinoline derivatives that can intrinsically form nanoassemblies. The selected BAQ12 and BAQ13 ONNs are highly effective in inducing lysosomal disruption, lysosomal dysfunction and autophagy blockade and exhibit 30-fold higher antiproliferative activity than hydroxychloroquine used in clinical trials. These single-drug nanoparticles demonstrate excellent pharmacokinetic and toxicological profiles and dramatic antitumour efficacy in vivo. In addition, they are able to encapsulate and deliver additional drugs to tumour sites and are thus promising agents for autophagy inhibition-based combination therapy. Given their transdisciplinary advantages, these BAQ ONNs have enormous potential to improve cancer therapy.

Suggested Citation

  • Zhao Ma & Jin Li & Kai Lin & Mythili Ramachandran & Dalin Zhang & Megan Showalter & Cristabelle Souza & Aaron Lindstrom & Lucas N. Solano & Bei Jia & Shiro Urayama & Yuyou Duan & Oliver Fiehn & Tzu-yi, 2020. "Pharmacophore hybridisation and nanoscale assembly to discover self-delivering lysosomotropic new-chemical entities for cancer therapy," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 11(1), pages 1-12, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:11:y:2020:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-020-18399-4
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-18399-4
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    Cited by:

    1. Huimin Zhu & Renyi Zhou & Dongsheng Cao & Jing Tang & Min Li, 2023. "A pharmacophore-guided deep learning approach for bioactive molecular generation," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 14(1), pages 1-11, December.

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