A light-responsive, self-immolative linker for controlled drug delivery: Via peptide- and protein-drug conjugates

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Abstract

When designing prodrugs, choosing an appropriate linker is the key to achieving efficient, controlled drug delivery. Herein, we report the use of a photocaged C4′-oxidized abasic site (PC4AP) as a light-responsive, self-immolative linker. Any amine- or hydroxyl-bearing drug can be loaded onto the linker via a carbamate or carbonate bond, and the linker is then conjugated to a carrier peptide or protein via an alkyl chain. The PC4AP linker is stable under physiologically relevant conditions. However, photodecaging of the linker generates an active intermediate that reacts intramolecularly with a primary amine (the ϵ-amine of a lysine residue and the N-terminal amine) on the carrier, leading to rapid and efficient release of the drug via an addition-elimination cascade, without generating any toxic side products. We demonstrated that the use of this self-immolative linker to conjugate the anticancer drug doxorubicin to a cell-penetrating peptide or an antibody enabled targeted, controlled delivery of the drug to cells. Our results suggest that the linker can be used with a broad range of carriers, such as cell-penetrating peptides, proteins, antibodies, and amine-functionalized polymers, and thus will find a wide range of practical applications.

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APA

Zang, C., Wang, H., Li, T., Zhang, Y., Li, J., Shang, M., … Zhou, C. (2019). A light-responsive, self-immolative linker for controlled drug delivery: Via peptide- and protein-drug conjugates. Chemical Science, 10(39), 8973–8980. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9sc03016f

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