Ting Kang
Fudan University
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Featured researches published by Ting Kang.
Biomaterials | 2013
Quanyin Hu; Guangzhi Gu; Zhongyang Liu; Mengyin Jiang; Ting Kang; Deyu Miao; Yifan Tu; Zhiqing Pang; Qingxiang Song; Lei Yao; Huimin Xia; Hongzhan Chen; Xinguo Jiang; Xiaoling Gao; Jun Chen
The development of a drug delivery strategy which can mediate efficient tumor targeting together with high cellular internalization and extensive vascular extravasation is essential and important for glioma treatment. To achieve this goal, F3 peptide that specifically bind to nucleolin, which is highly expressed on the surface of both glioma cells and endothelial cells of glioma angiogenic blood vessels, is utilized to decorate a nanoparticulate drug delivery system to realize glioma cell and neovasculature dual-targeting and efficient cellular internalization. Tumor homing and penetrating peptide, tLyp-1 peptide, which contains the motif of (R/K)XX(R/K) and specially binds to neuropilin is co-administrated to improve the penetration of the nanoparticles across angiogenic vasculature into glioma parenchyma. The F3 conjugation via a maleimide-thiol coupling reaction was confirmed by XPS analysis with 1.03% nitrogen detected on the surface of the functionalized nanoparticles. Enhanced cellular interaction with C6 cells, improved penetration in 3D multicell tumor spheroids, and increased cytotoxicity of the loaded paclitaxel were achieved by the F3-functionalized nanoparticles (F3-NP). Following co-administration with tLyp-1 peptide, F3-NP displayed enhanced accumulation at the tumor site and deep penetration into the glioma parenchyma and achieved the longest survival in mice bearing intracranial C6 glioma. The findings here clearly indicated that the strategy by co-administrating a tumor homing and penetrating peptide with functionalized nanoparticles dual-targeting both glioma cells and neovasculature could significantly improve the anti-glioma drug delivery, which also hold a great promise for chemotherapy of other hard-to-cure cancers.
Biomaterials | 2013
Quanyin Hu; Xiaoling Gao; Guangzhi Gu; Ting Kang; Yifan Tu; Zhongyang Liu; Qingxiang Song; Lei Yao; Zhiqing Pang; Xinguo Jiang; Hongzhuan Chen; Jun Chen
By taking advantage of the excessively upregulated expression of neuropilin (NRP) on the surface of both glioma cells and endothelial cells of angiogenic blood vessels, the ligand of NRP with high affinity - tLyp-1 peptide, which also contains a CendR motif ((R/K)XX(R/K)), was functionalized to the surface of PEG-PLA nanoparticles (tLyp-1-NP) to mediate its tumor homing, vascular extravasation and deep penetration into the glioma parenchyma. The tLyp-1-NP was prepared via a maleimide-thiol coupling reaction with uniformly spherical shape under TEM and particle size of 111.30 ± 15.64 nm. tLyp-1-NP exhibited enhanced cellular uptake in both human umbilical vein endothelial cells and Rat C6 glioma cells, increased cytotoxicity of the loaded PTX, and improved penetration and growth inhibition in avascular C6 glioma spheroids. Selective accumulation and deep penetration of tLyp-1-NP at the glioma site was confirmed by in vivo imaging and glioma distribution analysis. The longest survival was achieved by those mice bearing intracranial C6 glioma treated with PTX-loaded tLyp-1-NP. The findings here strongly indicate that tLyp-1 peptide-functionalized nanoparticulate DDS could significantly improve the efficacy of paclitaxel glioma therapy.
Biomaterials | 2013
Guangzhi Gu; Xiaoling Gao; Quanyin Hu; Ting Kang; Zhongyang Liu; Mengyin Jiang; Deyu Miao; Qingxiang Song; Lei Yao; Yifan Tu; Zhiqing Pang; Hongzhuan Chen; Xinguo Jiang; Jun Chen
Low permeability across the blood-brain tumor barrier (BTB) and poor penetration into the glioma parenchyma represent key obstacles for anti-glioblastoma drug delivery. In this study, MT1-AF7p peptide, which presents high binding affinity to membrane type-1 matrix metalloproteinase (MT1-MMP) that over-expressed on both angiogenic blood vessels and glioma cells, was employed to decorate the paclitaxel-loaded PEG-PLA nanoparticles (MT1-NP-PTX) to mediate glioblastoma targeting. Tumor-homing and penetrating peptide iRGD was co-administrated to further facilitate nanoparticles extravasation from the tumor vessels and penetration into the glioma parenchyma. MT1-NP-PTX showed satisfactory encapsulated efficiency, loading capacity and size distribution. In C6 glioma cells, MT1-NP was found to exhibit significantly enhanced cellular accumulation than that of unmodified NP via both energy-dependent macropinocytosis and lipid raft-mediated endocytosis. The anti-proliferative and apoptosis-induction activity of PTX was significantly enhanced following its encapsulation in MT1-NP. In vivo imaging and glioma distribution together confirmed that MT1-AF7p functionalization and iRGD co-administration significantly improved the nanoparticles extravasation across BTB and accumulation in glioma parenchyma. Furthermore, in vitro C6 glioma spheroid assays evidenced that MT1-NP effectively penetrated into the glioma spheroids and significantly improved the growth inhibitory effects of loaded PTX on glioma spheroids. More importantly, the median survival time of those nude mice bearing intracranial C6 glioma received MT1-NP-PTX and iRGD combination regimen was 60 days, significantly longer than that of other groups. The findings suggested that the BTB/glioma cells dual-targeting DDS co-administrated with iRGD peptide might provide a both practical and feasible solution to highly efficient anti-glioblastoma drug delivery.
ACS Nano | 2014
Qingxiang Song; Meng Huang; Lei Yao; Xiao-Lin Wang; Xiao Gu; Juan Chen; Jun Chen; Jialin Huang; Quanyin Hu; Ting Kang; Zhengxing Rong; Hong Qi; Gang Zheng; Hongzhuan Chen; Xiaoling Gao
Amyloid-beta (Aβ) accumulation in the brain is believed to play a central role in Alzheimers disease (AD) pathogenesis, and the common late-onset form of AD is characterized by an overall impairment in Aβ clearance. Therefore, development of nanomedicine that can facilitate Aβ clearance represents a promising strategy for AD intervention. However, previous work of this kind was concentrated at the molecular level, and the disease-modifying effectiveness of such nanomedicine has not been investigated in clinically relevant biological systems. Here, we hypothesized that a biologically inspired nanostructure, apolipoprotein E3-reconstituted high density lipoprotein (ApoE3-rHDL), which presents high binding affinity to Aβ, might serve as a novel nanomedicine for disease modification in AD by accelerating Aβ clearance. Surface plasmon resonance, transmission electron microscopy, and co-immunoprecipitation analysis showed that ApoE3-rHDL demonstrated high binding affinity to both Aβ monomer and oligomer. It also accelerated the microglial, astroglial, and liver cell degradation of Aβ by facilitating the lysosomal transport. One hour after intravenous administration, about 0.4% ID/g of ApoE3-rHDL gained access to the brain. Four-week daily treatment with ApoE3-rHDL decreased Aβ deposition, attenuated microgliosis, ameliorated neurologic changes, and rescued memory deficits in an AD animal model. The findings here provided the direct evidence of a biomimetic nanostructure crossing the blood-brain barrier, capturing Aβ and facilitating its degradation by glial cells, indicating that ApoE3-rHDL might serve as a novel nanomedicine for disease modification in AD by accelerating Aβ clearance, which also justified the concept that nanostructures with Aβ-binding affinity might provide a novel nanoplatform for AD therapy.
Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2015
Ting Kang; Mengyin Jiang; Di Jiang; Xingye Feng; Jianhui Yao; Qingxiang Song; Hongzhuan Chen; Xiaoling Gao; Jun Chen
Treatment of glioblastoma (GBM) remains to be the most formidable challenge because of the hindrance of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) along with the poor drug penetration into the glioma parenchyma. Nanoparticulate drug delivery systems (DDS) utilizing transferrin (Tf) as the targeting ligand to target the glioma-associated transferrin receptor (TfR) had met the problem of loss of specificity in biological environment due to the high level of endogenous Tf. Here we conjugated CRT peptide, an iron-mimicry moiety targeting the whole complex of Tf/TfR, to poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(l-lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles (CRT-NP), to open a new route to overcome such obstacle. High cellular associations, advanced transport ability through the BBB model, and penetration in 3-dimensional C6 glioma spheroids in vitro had preliminarily proved the advantages of CRT-NP over Tf-nanoparticle conjugates (Tf-NP). Compared with Tf-NP, NP, and Taxol, paclitaxel-loaded CRT-NP (CRT-NP-PTX) displayed a superior antiproliferation effect on C6 glioma cells and stronger inhibitory effect on glioma spheroids. Favored pharmacokinetics behavior and enhanced accumulation in glioma foci was observed, together with a much deeper distribution pattern in glioma parenchyma compared with unmodified nanoparticles and Tf-NP. Eventually, mice treated with CRT-NP-PTX showed a remarkably prolonged median survival compared to those treated with Taxol, NP, or Tf-NP. In conclusion, the modification of CRT to nanoparticles holds great promise for enhancement of antiglioma therapy.
Biomaterials | 2013
Quanyin Hu; Xiaoling Gao; Ting Kang; Xingye Feng; Di Jiang; Yifan Tu; Qingxiang Song; Lei Yao; Xinguo Jiang; Hongzhuan Chen; Jun Chen
Antiangiogenic therapy shows great advantages in clinical cancer treatment while no overall survival has been achieved. The compromised results were mainly contributed by intrinsic/acquired antiangiogenic drug resistance and increased local invasion or distant metastasis after antiangiogenic therapy. Here we constructed a CGKRK peptide-modified PEG-co-PCL nanoparticulate drug delivery system (DDS), aiming at targeting both tumor angiogenic blood vessels and tumor cells to achieve enhanced anti-tumor activity as well as holding a great potential to overcome the drawbacks of antiangiogenic therapy alone. The obtained CGKRK-functionalized PEG-co-PCL nanoparticles (CGKRK-NP) with a particle size of 117.28 ± 10.42 nm and zeta potential of -15.7 ± 3.32 mV, exhibited an enhanced accumulation via an energy-dependent, lipid raft/caveolae-mediated endocytosis with the involvement of microtubules in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and an energy-dependent, lipid raft/caveolae-mediated endocytosis with the participation of Golgi apparatus in human U87MG cells. Using coumarin-6 as the fluorescence probe, in vitro U87MG tumor spheroids assays showed that CGKRK-NP effectively penetrated into the tumor spheroids. Selective accumulation and extensive bio-distribution of CGKRK-NP at tumor site was confirmed by in vivo imaging and tumor section analysis. After drug loading, CGKRK-NP enhanced cytotoxicity and apoptosis induction activity of the loaded PTX on both HUVEC cells and U87MG cells and improved its inhibition effect on the growth of U87MG tumor spheroids. The smallest tumor volume was achieved by those mice bearing subcutaneous U87MG tumor following the treatment of PTX-loaded CGKRK-NP. The findings here indicated that CGKRK peptide-functionalized nanoparticulate DDS could be used as an effective tumor angiogenic blood vessels and tumor cells dual-targeting DDS and might provide a great promising approach for reducing the disadvantages of antiangiogenic therapy alone.
Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2013
Zhongyang Liu; Xiaoling Gao; Ting Kang; Mengyin Jiang; Deyu Miao; Guangzhi Gu; Quanyin Hu; Qingxiang Song; Lei Yao; Yifan Tu; Hongzhuan Chen; Xinguo Jiang; Jun Chen
The blood-brain barrier (BBB), which is formed by the brain capillary wall, greatly hinders the development of new drugs for the brain. Over the past decades, among the various receptor-mediated endogenous BBB transport systems, the strategy of using transferrin or anti-transferrin receptor antibodies to facilitate brain drug delivery system is of particular interest. However, the application of large proteins still suffers from the drawbacks including synthesis procedure, stability, and immunological response. Here, we explored a B6 peptide discovered by phase display as a substitute for transferrin, and conjugated it to PEG-PLA nanoparticles (NP) with the aim of enhancing the delivery of neuroprotective drug across the BBB for the treatment of Alzheimers disease. B6-modified NP (B6-NP) exhibited significantly higher accumulation in brain capillary endothelial cells via lipid raft-mediated and clathrin-mediated endocytosis. In vivo, fluorescently labeled B6-NP exhibited much higher brain accumulation when compared with NP. Administration of B6-NP encapsulated neuroprotective peptide-NAPVSIPQ (NAP)-to Alzheimers disease mouse models showed excellent amelioration in learning impairments, cholinergic disruption, and loss of hippocampal neurons even at lower dose. These findings together suggested that B6-NP might serve as a promising DDS for facilitating the brain delivery of neuropeptides.
Biomaterials | 2014
Ting Kang; Xiaoling Gao; Quanyin Hu; Di Jiang; Xingye Feng; Xue Zhang; Qingxiang Song; Lei Yao; Meng Huang; Xinguo Jiang; Zhiqing Pang; Hongzhuan Chen; Jun Chen
A major cross-cutting problem for glioma therapy is the poor extravasation and penetration of the payload drug in target glioma parenchyma. Here, to overcome these obstacles, a tumor vessel recognizing and tumor penetrating system is developed by functionalizating the poly (ethyleneglycol)-poly (L-lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles with an iNGR moiety (iNGR-NP). The nanoparticulate formulation is expected to achieve specific deep penetration in the tumor tissue by initially binding to aminopeptidase N, with iNGR proteolytically cleaved to CRNGR, and then bind with neuropilin-1 to mediate deep penetration in the tumor parenchyma. iNGR-NP exhibits significantly enhanced cellular uptake in human umbilical vein endothelial cells, improves the anti-proliferation and anti-tube formation abilities of paclitaxel in vitro. Following intravenous administration, iNGR-NP present favorable pharmacokinetic and tumor homing profiles. Glioma distribution and penetration assays confirm that iNGR-NP achieve the highest accumulation and deepest penetration at the glioma sites. The anti-glioma efficacy of paclitaxel-loaded iNGR-NP is verified by its improved anti-angiogenesis activity and the significantly prolonged survival time in mice bearing intracranial glioma. These evidences highlight the potential of iNGR-decorated nanoparticles in overcoming the leading edge problem in anti-glioma drug delivery.
ACS Nano | 2017
Ting Kang; Qianqian Zhu; Dan Wei; Jingxian Feng; Jianhui Yao; Tianze Jiang; Qingxiang Song; Xunbin Wei; Hongzhuan Chen; Xiaoling Gao; Jun Chen
The dissemination, seeding, and colonization of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) serve as the root of distant metastasis. As a key step in the early stage of metastasis formation, colonization of CTCs in the (pre-)metastatic niche appears to be a valuable target. Evidence showed that inflammatory neutrophils possess both a CTC- and niche-targeting property by the intrinsic cell adhesion molecules on neutrophils. Inspired by this mechanism, we developed a nanosize neutrophil-mimicking drug delivery system (NM-NP) by coating neutrophils membranes on the surface of poly(latic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles (NPs). The membrane-associated protein cocktails on neutrophils membrane were mostly translocated to the surface of NM-NP via a nondisruptive approach, and the biobinding activity of neutrophils was highly preserved. Compared with uncoated NP, NM-NP exhibited enhanced cellular association in 4T1 cell models under shear flow in vitro, much higher CTC-capture efficiency in vivo, and improved homing to the premetastatic niche. Following loading with carfilzomib, a second generation of proteasome inhibitor, the NM-NP-based nanoformulation (NM-NP-CFZ) selectively depleted CTCs in the blood, prevented early metastasis and potentially inhibited the progress of already-formed metastasis. Our NP design can neutralize CTCs in the circulation and inhibit the formation of a metastatic niche.
Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2014
Deyu Miao; Mengyin Jiang; Zhongyang Liu; Guangzhi Gu; Quanyin Hu; Ting Kang; Qingxiang Song; Lei Yao; Wei Li; Xiaoling Gao; Mingjiang Sun; Jun Chen
Chemotherapy is an indispensable auxiliary treatment for glioma but highly limited by the existence of both blood-brain barrier (BBB) and blood-brain tumor barrier (BBTB). The dysfunctional brain tumor blood vessels and high interstitial pressure in glioma also greatly hindered the accumulation and deep penetration of chemotherapeutics into the glioma. Lactoferrin (Lf), with its receptor overexpressed on both the brain endothelial cells and glioma cells, was here functionalized to the surface of poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(lactic acid) nanoparticles to mediate BBB/BBTB and glioma cell dual targeting. tLyP-1, a tumor-homing peptide, which contains a C-end Rule sequence that can mediate tissue penetration through the neuropilin-1-dependent internalization pathway, was coadministrated with Lf-functionalized nanoparticles (Lf-NP) to enhance its accumulation and deep penetration into the glioma parenchyma. Enhanced cellular association in both BCEC and C6 cells, increased cytotoxicity of the loaded paclitaxel, and deep penetration in the 3D glioma spheroids was achieved by Lf-NP. Following coadministration with tLyP-1, the functionalized nanoparticles obtained improved tumor targeting, glioma vascular extravasation, and antiglioma efficacy. The findings here suggested that the strategy by coadministrating BBB/BBTB and glioma cells dual-targeting nanocarriers with a tumor penetration enhancement peptide represent a promising platform for antiglioma drug delivery.