%0 Journal Article %T A gene delivery system with autophagy blockade for enhanced anti-angiogenic therapy against Fusobacterium nucleatum-associated colorectal cancer. %A Li N %A Yu Y %A Chen Q %A Niu J %A Gao C %A Qu X %A Zhang J %A Gao H %J Acta Biomater %V 183 %N 0 %D 2024 Jul 15 %M 38838905 %F 10.633 %R 10.1016/j.actbio.2024.05.051 %X Anti-angiogenesis has emerged a promising strategy against colorectal cancer (CRC). However, the efficacy of anti-angiogenic therapy is greatly compromised by the up-regulated autophagy levels resulting from the evolutionary resistance mechanism and the presence of Fusobacterium nucleatum (F. nucleatum) in CRC. Herein, we report a cationic polymer capable of blocking autophagic flux to deliver plasmid DNA (pDNA) encoding soluble FMS-like tyrosine kinase-1 (sFlt-1) for enhanced anti-angiogenic therapy against F. nucleatum-associated CRC. The autophagy-inhibiting cationic polymer, referred to as PNHCQ, is synthesized by conjugating hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) into 3,3'-diaminodipropylamine-pendant poly(β-benzyl-L-aspartate) (PAsp(Nors)), which can be assembled and electrostatically interacted with sFlt-1 plasmid to form PNHCQ/sFlt-1 polyplexes. Hydrophobic HCQ modification not only boosts transfection efficiency but confers autophagy inhibition activity to the polymer. Hyaluronic acid (HA) coating is further introduced to afford PNHCQ/sFlt-1@HA for improved tumor targeting without compromising on transfection. Consequently, PNHCQ/sFlt-1@HA demonstrates significant anti-tumor efficacy in F. nucleatum-colocalized HT29 mouse xenograft model by simultaneously exerting anti-angiogenic effects through sFlt-1 expression and down-regulating autophagy levels exacerbated by F. nucleatum challenge. The combination of anti-angiogenic gene delivery and overall autophagy blockade effectively sensitizes CRC tumors to anti-angiogenesis, providing an innovative approach for enhanced anti-angiogenic therapy against F. nucleatum-resident CRC. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Up-regulated autophagy level within tumors is considered responsible for the impaired efficacy of clinic antiangiogenic therapy against CRC colonized with pathogenic F. nucleatum. To tackle this problem, an autophagy-inhibiting cationic polymer is developed to enable efficient intracellular delivery of plasmid DNA encoding soluble FMS-like tyrosine kinase-1 (sFlt-1) and enhance anti-angiogenic therapy against F. nucleatum-associated CRC. HA coating that can be degraded by tumor-enriching hyaluronidase is further introduced for improved tumor targeting without compromising transfection efficiency. The well-orchestrated polyplexes achieve considerable tumor accumulation, efficient in vivo transfection, and effectively reinforce the sensitivity of CRC to the sFlt-1-derived anti-angiogenic effects by significantly blocking overall autophagy flux exacerbated by F. nucleatum challenge, thus harvesting robust antitumor outcomes against F. nucleatum-resident CRC.