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Artemisinin-Based Smart Nanomedicines with Self-Supply of Ferrous Ion to Enhance Oxidative Stress for Specific and Efficient Cancer Treatment.

Yingping LuoXian SunLiwei HuangJin YanBo-Yang YuJiangwei Tian
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Though abundant researches report that artemisinin could inhibit cancer cell growth via generating toxic reactive oxygen species (ROS), the therapeutic efficiency of artemisinin for cancer treatment is still limited owing to the insufficient intracellular ferrous ion and defensive effect of intracellular glutathione. Herein, we report a cathepsin B-controllable smart nanomedicine based on the structural and pharmacodynamic characteristics of artemisinin, which employed transferrin-peptide-modified mesoporous silica to codeliver artemisinin and buthionine-sulfoximine, a glutathione scavenger, into cancer cells. As a gatekeeper, the transferrin-peptide can not only target the cancer cells but also supply the extra ferrous iron to catalyze artemisinin to produce excessive ROS to kill cancer cells efficiently. Once the designed nanomedicine attack into lysosome of tumor cells, the cargos of nanomedicine can be released in the presence of cathepsin B to immediately activate self-amplification of oxidative stress by simultaneously elevating the levels of ROS and weakening the levels of glutathione. We anticipate that this rational design strategy provides innovative opportunities for artemisinin in the clinical application of cancer.
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