1. Glioblastoma-Derived Exosomes as Nanopharmaceutics for Improved Glioma Treatment.
- Author
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Lee, Hyeji, Bae, Kanghye, Baek, Ah-Rum, Kwon, Eun-Bin, Kim, Yeoun-Hee, Nam, Sung-Wook, Lee, Gang Ho, and Chang, Yongmin
- Subjects
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EXOSOMES , *GLIOMAS , *GLIOBLASTOMA multiforme , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents - Abstract
The use of cancer-derived exosomes has been studied in several cancer types, but the cancer-targeting efficacy of glioma-derived exosomes has not been investigated in depth for malignant glioblastoma (GBM) cells. In this study, exosomes were derived from U87MG human glioblastoma cells, and selumetinib, a new anticancer drug, was loaded into the exosomes. We observed the tropism of GBM-derived exosomes in vitro and in vivo. We found that the tropism of GBM-derived exosomes is in contrast to the behavior of non-exosome-enveloped drugs and non-GBM-specific exosomes in vitro and in vivo in an animal GBM model. We found that the tropism exhibited by GBM-derived exosomes can be utilized to shuttle selumetinib, with no specific targeting moiety, to GBM tumor sites. Therefore, our findings indicated that GBM-derived exosomes loaded with selumetinib had a specific antitumor effect on U87MG cells and were non-toxic to normal brain cells. These exosomes offer improved therapeutic prospects for glioblastoma therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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