Multifunctional Hybrid Hydrogel Enhanced Antitumor Therapy through Multiple Destroying DNA Functions by a Triple-Combination Synergistic Therapy.
Jiamin ZhangLijun YangFan HuangCuicui ZhaoJinjian LiuYumin ZhangJianfeng LiuPublished in: Advanced healthcare materials (2021)
Brachytherapy, as an effective setting for precise cancer therapy in clinic, can lead to serious DNA damage. However, its therapeutic efficacy is always limited by the DNA self-repair property, tumor hypoxia-associated radiation resistance as well as inhomogeneous distribution of the radioactive material. Herein, a multifunctional hybrid hydrogel (131 I-hydrogel/DOX/GNPs aggregates) is developed by loading gold nanoparticle aggregates (GNPs aggregates) and DOX into a radionuclide iodine-131 (131 I) labelled polymeric hydrogels (131 I-PEG-P(Tyr)8 ) for tumor destruction by completely damaging DNA self-repair functions. This hybrid hydrogel exhibits excellent photothermal/radiolabel stability, biocompatibility, and fluorescence/photothermal /SPECT imaging properties. After local injection, the sustained releasing DOX within tumor greatly inhibits the DNA replication. Meanwhile, GNPs aggregates as a radiosensitizer and photosensitizer show a significant improvement of brachytherapeutic efficacy and cause serious DNA damage. Simultaneously, GNPs aggregates induce mild photothermal therapy under 808 nm laser irradiation, which not only inhibits self-repair of the damaged DNA but also effectively relieves tumor hypoxic condition to enhance the therapeutic effects of brachytherapy, leading to a triple-synergistic destruction of DNA functions. Therefore, this study provides a highly efficient tumor synergistic therapy platform and insight into the synergistic antitumor mechanism in DNA level.
Keyphrases
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- circulating tumor
- single molecule
- dna damage
- cell free
- drug release
- highly efficient
- radiation therapy
- photodynamic therapy
- tissue engineering
- high dose
- hyaluronic acid
- magnetic resonance imaging
- stem cells
- wound healing
- nucleic acid
- computed tomography
- low dose
- squamous cell carcinoma
- circulating tumor cells
- quantum dots
- dna repair
- high speed