High hydrostatic pressure encapsulation of doxorubicin in ferritin nanocages with enhanced efficiency

July 28, 2017

Title

High hydrostatic pressure encapsulation of doxorubicin in ferritin nanocages with enhanced efficiency

Author

Qi Wang, Chun Zhang, Liping Liu, Zenglan Li, Fangxia Guo, Xiunan Li, Jian Luo, Dawei Zhao, Yongdong Liu, Zhiguo Su

Year

2017

Journal

Journal of Biotechnology

Abstract

Human ferritin (HFn) nanocaging is becoming an appealing platform for anticancer drugs delivery. However, protein aggregation always occurs during the encapsulation process, resulting in low production efficiency. A new approach using high hydrostatic pressure (HHP) was explored in this study to overcome the problem of loading doxorubicin (DOX) in HFn. At the pressure of 500 MPa and pH 5.5, DOX molecules were found to be encapsulated into HFn. Meanwhile, combining it with an additive of 20 mM arginine completely inhibited precipitation and aggregation, resulting in highly monodispersed nanoparticles with almost 100% protein recovery. Furthermore, stepwise decompression and incubation of the complex in atmospheric pressure at pH 7.4 for another period could further increase the DOX encapsulation ratio. The HFn-DOX nanoparticles (NPs) showed similar morphology and structural features to the hollow cage and no notable drug leakage occurred for HFn-DOX NPs when stored at 4 °C and pH 7.4 for two weeks. HFn-DOX NPs prepared through HHP also showed significant cytotoxicity in vitro and higher antitumor bioactivity in vivo than naked DOX. Moreover, This HHP encapsulation strategy could economize on DOX that was greatly wasted during the conventional preparation process simply through a desalting column. These results indicated that HHP could offer a feasible approach with high efficiency for the production of HFn-DOX NPs.

Instrument

J-810

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Secondary structure, Nanostructures, Biochemistry, Materials