4.7 Article

Targeted Chemotherapy of Glioblastoma Spheroids with an Iontronic Pump

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS TECHNOLOGIES
Volume 6, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admt.202001302

Keywords

electrophoretic drug delivery; gemcitabine; glioblastoma multiforme; organic electronic ion pumps

Funding

  1. Ph.D. program Molecular Medicine (MOLMED) of the Medical University of Graz
  2. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P28701, TAI 245]
  3. FWF project [P28701]
  4. Medical University of Graz through the Ph.D. Program Molecular Medicine
  5. DOC Fellowship of the Austrian Academy of Sciences at the Institute of Biophysics at the Gottfried Schatz Research Center, Medical University of Graz
  6. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  7. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research
  8. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Doctoral school DK Metabolic and Cardiovascular disease [W1266]
  9. SFB Lipid hydrolysis [F73]
  10. Austrian ministry of Science, Research and Economy [Omics Center Graz project]
  11. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P28701] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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The study confirms Gem's significantly greater potency in killing GBM cells compared to temozolomide, and demonstrates the potential of the electronically-driven organic ion pump GemIP for targeted delivery to GBM cells.
Successful treatment of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most lethal tumor of the brain, is presently hampered by (i) the limits of safe surgical resection and (ii) shielding of residual tumor cells from promising chemotherapeutic drugs such as Gemcitabine (Gem) by the blood brain barrier (BBB). Here, the vastly greater GBM cell-killing potency of Gem compared to the gold standard temozolomide is confirmed, moreover, it shows neuronal cells to be at least 10(4)-fold less sensitive to Gem than GBM cells. The study also demonstrates the potential of an electronically-driven organic ion pump (GemIP) to achieve controlled, targeted Gem delivery to GBM cells. Thus, GemIP-mediated Gem delivery is confirmed to be temporally and electrically controllable with pmol min(-1) precision and electric addressing is linked to the efficient killing of GBM cell monolayers. Most strikingly, GemIP-mediated GEM delivery leads to the overt disintegration of targeted GBM tumor spheroids. Electrically-driven chemotherapy, here exemplified, has the potential to radically improve the efficacy of GBM adjuvant chemotherapy by enabling exquisitely-targeted and controllable delivery of drugs irrespective of whether these can cross the BBB.

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