Oxygen Vacancy Defect-Induced Activity Enhancement of Gd Doping Magnetic Nanocluster for Oxygen Supplying Cancer Theranostics.
Rui XuZhaowei XuYuanchun SiXin XingQingdong LiJianmin XiaoBin WangGeng TianLing ZhuZhengyan WuGuilong ZhangPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
This work finds that Fe3O4 nanoclusters can rearrange by Gd doping and then self-assemble to a hollow magnetic nanocluster (HMNC), providing larger magnetic moments to obtain an excellent MRI capability and increasing the number of oxygen vacancies in HMNC. The hollow structure makes platinum(IV) prodrugs effectively load into HMNC. Second, plenty of oxygen vacancy defects can capture oxygen molecules, enhance the catalytic activity of HMNC, and then promote intracellular ROS generation. On the basis of this, a targeting iRGD-labeled HMNC nanosystem (iHMNCPt-O2) is developed through loading oxygen molecules and platinum(IV) prodrugs for chemo- and chemodynamic therapy of cancer. This nanosystem shows an excellent response ability to weak acid and GSH, which can cause a series of cascade reactions in a cell. These cascade reactions are dramatically enhanced at the intracellular ROS level, cause mitochondria and DNA damage, and then induce cancer cell death. Besides, systemic delivery of iHMNCPt-O2 significantly enhanced the MRI contrast signal of tumors and improved the quality of MR images, accurately diagnosing tumors. Therefore, this work provides a novel method for accelerating the Fenton-like reaction and enhancing the MRI capability and fabricates a promising "all-in-one" system to overwhelm the problems of cancer theranostic.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- papillary thyroid
- dna damage
- contrast enhanced
- squamous cell
- magnetic resonance imaging
- reactive oxygen species
- magnetic resonance
- oxidative stress
- computed tomography
- squamous cell carcinoma
- lymph node metastasis
- optical coherence tomography
- childhood cancer
- diabetic rats
- mass spectrometry
- hydrogen peroxide
- dna repair
- highly efficient
- pet ct
- rectal cancer
- smoking cessation