Ultrasmall Iron-Doped Titanium Oxide Nanodots for Enhanced Sonodynamic and Chemodynamic Cancer Therapy.
Shang BaiNailin YangXian-Wen WangFei GongZiliang DongYuehan GongZhuang LiuLiang ChengPublished in: ACS nano (2020)
Sonodynamic therapy (SDT), which can generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) based on sonosensitizers under ultrasound (US) to kill tumor cells, has emerged as a noninvasive therapeutic modality with high tissue-penetration depth. Herein, ultrasmall iron-doped titanium oxide nanodots (Fe-TiO2 NDs) are synthesized via a thermal decomposition strategy as a type of sonosensitizers to enhance SDT. Interestingly, the Fe doping in this system appears to be crucial in not only enhancing the US-triggered ROS generation of those NDs but also offering NDs the Fenton-catalytic function to generate ROS from tumor endogenous H2O2 for chemodynamic therapy (CDT). After polyethylene glycol (PEG) modification, Fe-TiO2-PEG NDs demonstrate good physiological stability and biocompatibility. With efficient tumor retention after intravenous injection as revealed by in vivo magnetic resonance (MR) and fluorescent imaging, our Fe-TiO2 NDs demonstrate much better in vivo therapeutic performance than commercial TiO2 nanoparticles owing to the combination of CDT and SDT. Moreover, most of those ultrasmall Fe-TiO2 NDs can be effectively excreted within one month, rendering no obvious long-term toxicity to the treated mice. Our work thus presents a type of multifunctional sonosensitizer for highly efficient cancer treatment via simply doping TiO2 nanostructures with metal ions.
Keyphrases
- visible light
- quantum dots
- reactive oxygen species
- highly efficient
- magnetic resonance
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- metal organic framework
- cell death
- dna damage
- magnetic resonance imaging
- aqueous solution
- high resolution
- contrast enhanced
- stem cells
- iron oxide
- metabolic syndrome
- high dose
- type diabetes
- high fat diet induced
- iron oxide nanoparticles
- insulin resistance
- water soluble