Low Colorectal Tumor Removal by E-Cadherin Destruction-Enabled Tumor Cell Dissociation.
Man LiQunqun BaoJing GuoRuting XieChao ShenQing WeiPing HuHuanlong QinJianlin ShiPublished in: Nano letters (2022)
Treatments for low colorectal cancer (CRC) remain a great challenge due to the heavy physical and psychological burdens of colostomy, strong drug toxicity in chemotherapy, and myelosuppression-/chemoradiation-related gastrointestinal symptoms. In this study, a highly biosafe and effective tumor cell dissociation-based low CRC treatment modality has been verified on both PDOs in vitro and colorectal tumor models in vivo . Notably, controllable EDTA release at the tumor sites was achieved by the LDH degradation in response to a slightly acidic microenvironment of low CRC tumors. Resultantly, the intratumoral E-cadherin for intercellular junctions of low CRC tumors was effectively destroyed via Ca 2+ depletion by released EDTA from the interlayers, initiating remarkable tumor cell dissociation and resultant tumor disaggregation/removal via defecation. Dissociated tumor cells were prevailingly enveloped by LDH/EDTA, which prevented them from readhering to adjacent tissues, providing an unprecedented, efficient and safe therapeutic modality for low CRC, which will benefit patients suffering low CRC.