Molecular Targeting-Mediated Mild-Temperature Photothermal Therapy with a Smart Albumin-Based Nanodrug.
Ge GaoYao-Wen JiangWei SunYuxin GuoHao-Ran JiaXin-Wang YuGuang-Yu PanFu-Gen WuPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2019)
Photothermal therapy (PTT) usually requires hyperthermia >50 °C for effective tumor ablation, which inevitably induces heating damage to the surrounding normal tissues/organs. Moreover, low tumor retention and high liver accumulation are the two main obstacles that significantly limit the efficacy and safety of many nanomedicines. To solve these problems, a smart albumin-based tumor microenvironment-responsive nanoagent is designed via the self-assembly of human serum albumin (HSA), dc-IR825 (a cyanine dye and a photothermal agent), and gambogic acid (GA, a heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) inhibitor and an anticancer agent) to realize molecular targeting-mediated mild-temperature PTT. The formed HSA/dc-IR825/GA nanoparticles (NPs) can escape from mitochondria to the cytosol through mitochondrial disruption under near-infrared (NIR) laser irradiation. Moreover, the GA molecules block the hyperthermia-induced overexpression of HSP90, achieving the reduced thermoresistance of tumor cells and effective PTT at a mild temperature (<45 °C). Furthermore, HSA/dc-IR825/GA NPs show pH-responsive charge reversal, effective tumor accumulation, and negligible liver deposition, ultimately facilitating synergistic mild-temperature PTT and chemotherapy. Taken together, the NIR-activated NPs allow the release of molecular drugs more precisely, ablate tumors more effectively, and inhibit cancer metastasis more persistently, which will advance the development of novel mild-temperature PTT-based combination strategies.
Keyphrases
- heat shock protein
- pet ct
- cancer therapy
- photodynamic therapy
- heat shock
- dendritic cells
- oxidative stress
- human serum albumin
- drug delivery
- gene expression
- single molecule
- mental health
- cell death
- heat stress
- papillary thyroid
- fluorescence imaging
- mass spectrometry
- locally advanced
- rectal cancer
- fluorescent probe
- drug induced
- squamous cell carcinoma
- radiation induced
- reactive oxygen species
- endothelial cells
- atrial fibrillation
- radiofrequency ablation