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      Modulation of hydrogel nanoparticle intracellular trafficking by multivalent surface engineering with tumor targeting peptide.

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          Abstract

          Surface engineering of a hydrogel nanoparticle (NP) with the tumor-targeting ligand, F3 peptide, enhances both the NP's binding affinity for, and internalization by, nucleolin overexpressing tumor cells. Remarkably, the F3-functionalized NPs consistently exhibited significantly lower trafficking to the degradative lysosomes than the non-functionalized NPs, in the tumor cells, after internalization. This is attributed to the non-functionalized NPs, but not the F3-functionalized NPs, being co-internalized with Lysosome-associated Membrane Protein-1 (LAMP1) from the surface of the tumor cells. Furthermore, it is shown that the intracellular trafficking of the F3-functionalized NPs differs significantly from that of the molecular F3 peptides (untethered to NPs). This has important implications for designing effective, chemically-responsive, controlled-release and multifunctional nanodrugs for multi-drug-resistant cancers.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nanoscale
          Nanoscale
          Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
          2040-3372
          2040-3364
          Nov 07 2013
          : 5
          : 21
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Chemistry, University of Michigan, 930 North University Ave, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA. kopelman@umich.edu.
          Article
          NIHMS521652
          10.1039/c3nr00908d
          3823366
          24056573
          eac2bf43-572b-4954-9b43-812616218c7a
          History

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