In situ formation of biomolecular condensates as intracellular drug reservoirs for augmenting chemotherapy

Cet article présente une méthode pour contrôler la formation in situ de condensats biomoléculaires capables de retenir les agents chimiothérapeutiques dans les cellules cancéreuses

Nature Biomedical Engineering, sous presse, 2024, résumé

Résumé en anglais

Biomolecular condensates, which arise from liquid–liquid phase separation within cells, may provide a means of enriching and prolonging the retention of small-molecule drugs within cells. Here we report a method for the controlled in situ formation of biomolecular condensates as reservoirs for the enrichment and retention of chemotherapeutics in cancer cells, and show that the approach can be leveraged to enhance antitumour efficacies in mice with drug-resistant tumours. The method involves histones as positively charged proteins and doxorubicin-intercalated DNA strands bioorthogonally linked via a click-to-release reaction between trans-cyclooctene and tetrazine groups. The reaction temporarily impaired the phase separation of histones in vitro, favoured the initiation of liquid–liquid phase separation within cells and led to the formation of biomolecular condensates that were sufficiently large to be retained within tumour cells. The controlled formation of biomolecular condensates as drug reservoirs within cells may offer new options for boosting the efficacies of cancer therapies.