肿瘤坏死因子相关细胞凋亡诱导配体工程技术在肿瘤精准打击治疗中的研究进展。

IF 8.1 Q1 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Biomaterials research Pub Date : 2025-03-19 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.34133/bmr.0170
Chae Eun Lee, Kyung Mu Noh, Sungjun Kim, Jiyeon Hong, Kyobum Kim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有效的药物递送依赖于合适载体的选择,这对于基于蛋白质的治疗方法(如肿瘤坏死因子相关凋亡诱导配体(TRAIL))至关重要。TRAIL的关键优势之一是,它能够通过与各种癌细胞中高表达的死亡受体DR4和DR5结合,选择性地诱导除健康组织外的癌细胞凋亡。尽管有这样的前景,TRAIL的临床应用受到半衰期短、稳定性有限和肿瘤部位递送效率低的限制。为了克服目前可用的临床和工程方法,需要一系列复杂的策略:(a)设计生物材料介导的载体以增强靶向效力,特别是通过优化选定的材料、组成、配方和表面调制。此外,(b)转基因细胞产品的发展,以增强TRAIL向肿瘤微环境的分泌,(c)细胞表面工程技术,将TRAIL固定在不融合的细胞群上,也在本综述中进行了讨论。在这些方法中,基于活细胞的载体提供了系统给药的trail功能化细胞捕获血液中的循环肿瘤细胞的明显优势,从而防止继发性肿瘤的形成。本文综述了新型TRAIL给药平台的发展,讨论了临床转化的考虑因素,并提出了未来的发展方向和补充策略,以推进基于TRAIL的癌症治疗领域。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Recent Tumor Necrosis Factor-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand Engineering Strategies for Precise Strike Therapy against Tumor.

Effective drug delivery relies on the selection of suitable carriers, which is crucial for protein-based therapeutics such as tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL). One of the key advantages of TRAIL is its ability to selectively induce apoptosis in cancer cells excluding healthy tissues by binding to death receptors DR4 and DR5, which are highly expressed in various cancer cells. Despite this promise, the clinical application of TRAIL has been limited by its short half-life, limited stability, and inefficient delivery to tumor sites. To overcome currently available clinical and engineering approaches, a series of sophisticated strategies is required: (a) the design of biomaterial-mediated carriers for enhanced targeting efficacy, particularly via optimizing selected materials, composition, formulation, and surface modulation. Moreover, (b) development of genetically modified cellular products for augmented TRAIL secretion toward tumor microenvironments and (c) cell surface engineering techniques for TRAIL immobilization onto infusible cell populations are also discussed in the present review. Among these approaches, living cell-based carriers offer the distinct advantage of systemically administered TRAIL-functionalized cells capturing circulating tumor cells in the bloodstream, thereby preventing secondary tumor formation. This review provides insight into the development of novel TRAIL delivery platforms, discusses considerations for clinical translation, and suggests future directions and complementary strategies to advance the field of TRAIL-based cancer therapeutics.

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