The increase in multidrug resistance among colon cancer cells presents a challenge for the development of effective therapies. Small-molecule analogues of second mitochondria-derived activator of caspase (SMAC) mimetic in association with mixed lineage kinase domain-like protein (MLKL)-pDNA and z-VAD-fmk have shown ideal antitumor effects in colon cancer cells in vitro via induction of RIP3-dependent necroptosis. To achieve synergistic antitumor effects in vivo, liposomes loaded with SMAC mimetic, MLKL-pDNA and z-VAD-fmk have been developed using novel lipid fusion methods to co-localise the molecules of interest within the tumour cells. The co-encapsulation liposome (MLKL-zVAD-BV6-LP) had a high entrapment efficiency of approximately 95% for both zVAD and BV6 and was able to condense MLKL-pDNA very well. The vectors showed good biocompatibility, tumour targeting and small-molecule co-localisation. In a CT26 mouse model, the MLKL-zVAD-BV6-LP exhibited a tumour-suppression rate of over 60% in vivo, which was significantly higher than that of both the null-liposome and coadministration groups. Above all, the co-encapsulation system provided a novel approach to combination tumour therapy.
Keywords: MLKL-pDNA; SMAC mimetic; co-encapsulation liposome; liposome fusion; zVAD.