Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1162
Title: A Localized Chimeric Hydrogel Therapy Combats Tumor Progression through Alteration of Sphingolipid Metabolism
Authors: Sengupta, Sagar
Dasgupta, Ujjaini
Bajaj, Avinash
Pal, Sanjay
Medatwal, Nihal
Kumar, Sandeep
Kar, Animesh
Komalla, Varsha
Yavvari, Prabhu Srinivas
Mishra, Deepakkumar
Rizvi, Zaigham Abbas
Nandan, Shiv
Malakar, Dipankar
Pillai, Manoj
Awasthi, Amit
Das, Prasenjit
Sharma, Ravi Datta
Srivastava, Aasheesh
Issue Date: Oct-2019
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Abstract: Rapid proliferation of cancer cells assisted by endothelial cell-mediated angiogenesis and acquired inflammation at the tumor microenvironment (TME) lowers the success rate of chemotherapeutic regimens. Therefore, targeting these processes using localized delivery of a minimally toxic drug combination may be a promising strategy. Here, we present engineering of a biocompatible self-assembled lithocholic acid-dipeptide derived hydrogel (TRI-Gel) that can maintain sustained delivery of antiproliferating doxorubicin, antiangiogenic combretastatin-A4 and anti-inflammatory dexamethasone. Application of TRI-Gel therapy to a murine tumor model promotes enhanced apoptosis with a concurrent reduction in angiogenesis and inflammation, leading to effective abrogation of tumor proliferation and increased median survival with reduced drug resistance. In-depth RNA-sequencing analysis showed that TRI-Gel therapy induced transcriptome-wide alternative splicing of many genes responsible for oncogenic transformation including sphingolipid genes. We demonstrate that TRI-Gel therapy targets the reversal of a unique intron retention event in β-glucocerebrosidase 1 (Gba1), thereby increasing the availability of functional Gba1 protein. An enhanced Gba1 activity elevates ceramide levels responsible for apoptosis and decreases glucosylceramides to overcome drug resistance. Therefore, TRI-Gel therapy provides a unique system that affects the TME via post-transcriptional modulations of sphingolipid metabolic genes, thereby opening a new and rational approach to cancer therapy.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1162
Appears in Collections:Signal Transduction-II, Publications

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