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Tumor Microenvironment-Responsive, Multistaged Liposome Induces Apoptosis and Ferroptosis by Amplifying Oxidative Stress for Enhanced Cancer Therapy.

Longfa KouRui SunXinyu JiangXinlu LinHuirong HuangShihui BaoYouting ZhangChao LiRuijie ChenQing Yao
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
Tumor cells usually display metabolic, genetic, and microenvironment-related alterations, which are beneficial to tumor proliferation, tumor development, and resistance occurrence. Many transporters and enzymes, including ATB0,+, xCT, and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), are involved in the altered cell metabolism and tumor microenvironment and often abnormally upregulated in malignant tumors. Meanwhile, these dysregulated transporters and enzymes provide targets not only for a pharmacological blockage to suppress tumor progress but also for tumor-specific delivery. Although transporters and MMPs have been widely reported for antitumor drug delivery, the feasibility of utilizing two strategies has never been elucidated yet. Herein, we developed an MMP2-activated and ATB0,+-targeted liposome with doxorubicin and sorafenib (DS@MA-LS) loaded for optimal tumor drug delivery for cancer therapy. DS@MA-LS was designed to prolong blood circulation and deshield the PEG shell from MMP2 cleavage to expose lysine and target overexpressed ATB0,+ for enhanced tumor distribution and cancer cellular uptake. Besides the anticancer effects of loaded drugs, the endocytosed liposomes could further increase ROS production and suppress the antioxidant system to amplify oxidative stress. As expected, DS@MA-LS displayed enhanced targeted drug delivery to tumor sites with the MMP2-controlled ligand exposure and ATB0,+-mediated uptake. More importantly, DS@MA-LS successfully inhibited the tumor growth and cancer cell proliferation both in vitro and in vivo by enhancing apoptosis and ferroptosis, which thanks to the increased ROS generation and impaired GSH synthesis synergistically amplified oxidative stress. Our results suggested that the tumor microenvironment-responsive, multistaged nanoplatform, DS@MA-LS, has excellent potential for optimal drug delivery and enhanced cancer treatment.
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