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Authors Xu H, Jia F, Singh PK, Ruan S, Zhang H, Li X
Received 4 July 2016
Accepted for publication 19 September 2016
Published 16 December 2016 Volume 2017:12 Pages 29—40
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S116367
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Akshita Wason
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Linlin Sun
Abstract: The anti-glioma effect of temozolomide (Tem) is sometimes
undermined by the emerging resistance. Recently, resveratrol (Res), herbal
medicine extracted from grape seeds, has been demonstrated for its potential
use in chemosensitization. In the current study, both these drugs were loaded
simultaneously into nanoparticles with methoxy poly(ethylene glycol)-poly
epsilon caprolactone (mPEG-PCL) as drug carriers in order to achieve better
antitumor efficiency. Tem/Res-coloaded mPEG-PCL nanoparticles were constructed,
characterized, and tested for antitumor effect on glioma cells by using in
vitro and xenograft model system. The nanoparticle constructs were satisfactory
with drug loading content (Res =~12.4%; Tem =~9.3%) and encapsulation
capacity of >85% for both the drugs. In addition, the coencapsulation led to
better in vitro stability of the nanoparticles than Tem-loaded nanoparticles.
An in vitro uptake study demonstrated a high uptake efficiency of the
nanoparticles by glioma cells. The synergistic antitumor effect against glioma
cells was observed in the combinational treatment of Res and Tem.
Tem/Res-coloaded nanoparticles induced higher apoptosis in U87 glioma cells as
compared to cells treated by the combination of free drugs. Tem/Res-coloaded
particles caused more effective inhibition of phosphor-Akt, leading to
upregulation of the downstream apoptotic proteins. In addition, the in vivo
study showed the superior tumor delaying effect of coloaded nanoparticles than
that of free drug combination. These results suggest that Tem/Res-coloaded
nanoparticles could be a potential useful chemotherapeutic formulation for
glioma therapy.
Keywords: resveratrol, temozolomide, synergy,
mPEG-PCL, polymeric, drug delivery