Tumor Oxygenation and Hypoxia Inducible Factor-1 Functional Inhibition via a Reactive Oxygen Species Responsive Nanoplatform for Enhancing Radiation Therapy and Abscopal Effects.
Lingtong MengYali ChengXiaoning TongShaoju GanYawen DingYu ZhangChao WangLei XuYishen ZhuJinhui WuYiqiao HuJinhui WuPublished in: ACS nano (2018)
Hypoxia, and hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1), can induce tumor resistance to radiation therapy. To overcome hypoxia-induced radiation resistance, recent studies have described nanosystems to improve tumor oxygenation for immobilizing DNA damage and simultaneously initiate oxygen-dependent HIF-1α degradation. However, HIF-1α degradation is incomplete during tumor oxygenation treatment alone. Therefore, tumor oxygenation combined with residual HIF-1 functional inhibition is crucial to optimizing therapeutic outcomes of radiotherapy. Here, a reactive oxygen species (ROS) responsive nanoplatform is reported to successfully add up tumor oxygenation and HIF-1 functional inhibition. This ROS responsive nanoplatform, based on manganese dioxide (MnO2) nanoparticles, delivers the HIF-1 inhibitor acriflavine and other hydrophilic cationic drugs to tumor tissues. After reacting with overexpressed hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) within tumor tissues, Mn2+ and oxygen molecules are released for magnetic resonance imaging and tumor oxygenation, respectively. Cooperating with the HIF-1 functional inhibition, the expression of tumor invasion-related signaling molecules (VEGF, MMP-9) is obviously decreased to reduce the risk of metastasis. Furthermore, the nanoplatform could relieve T-cell exhaustion via downregulation of PD-L1, whose effects are similar to the checkpoint inhibitor PD-L1 antibody, and subsequently activates tumor-specific immune responses against abscopal tumors. These therapeutic benefits including increased X-ray-induced damage, downregulated resistance, and T-cell exhaustion related proteins expression achieved synergistically the optimal inhibition of tumor growth. Overall, this designed ROS responsive nanoplatform is of great potential in the sensitization of radiation for combating primary and metastatic tumors.
Keyphrases
- dna damage
- radiation therapy
- reactive oxygen species
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cancer therapy
- endothelial cells
- hydrogen peroxide
- photodynamic therapy
- immune response
- cell proliferation
- squamous cell carcinoma
- computed tomography
- radiation induced
- early stage
- type diabetes
- oxidative stress
- blood flow
- inflammatory response
- nitric oxide
- skeletal muscle
- mass spectrometry
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- climate change
- insulin resistance
- tandem mass spectrometry
- stress induced
- ionic liquid