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Developing protein arginine methyltransferase 1 (PRMT1) inhibitor TC-E-5003 as an antitumor drug using INEI drug delivery systems

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-26, 10:11 authored by Pengcheng Zhang, He Tao, Liyang Yu, Lixiao Zhou, Chenggang Zhu

Injectable implants with the ability to form in situ are one of the most promising carriers for the delivery of chemotherapeutic drugs to tumor sites. We have reported a novel injectable in situ-forming implant system composed of n-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate (NBCA), ethyl oleate, along with the sol-gel phase transition. The chemotherapeutic drug-loaded injectable NBCA ethyl oleate implant (INEI) exhibited excellent therapeutic efficacy for local chemotherapy. Herein, we utilize this INEI to carry N, N′-(Sulfonyldi-4,1-phenylene)bis(2-chloroacetamide) (TE-C-5003), which is a selective protein arginine methyltransferase 1 (PRMT1) inhibitor, to treat the lung cancer mice model. The in vitro experiment shows that TE-C-5003 has a good anti-tumor effect on lung cancer (IC50 = 0.7022 µM for A549; IC50 = 0.6844 µM for NCL-H1299) and breast cancer (IC50 = 0.4128 µM for MCF-7; IC50 = 0.5965 µM for MDA-MB-231). Anti-tumor experiments in animal models showed that the average growth inhibition rate of xenografted human lung cancer cells by the TE-C-5003-loaded INEI (40% NBCA) was 68.23%, which is far more than TC-E-5003 alone (31.76%). Our study further confirms that INEI is an effective technique to improve the anti-tumor effect. The druggability of small molecule compounds can be improved with the help of the mentioned technology. Also, TC-E-5003 may be developed as a broad spectrum anti-tumor drug.

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