Login / Signup

Supramolecular catalytic nanomedicines based on coordination self-assembly of amino acids for cascade-activated and -amplified synergetic cancer therapy.

Enhui SongQiong WuRen GaoXiaopeng LanYanhui ZhangHao GengChunlei LiuFeijie XuYongxin LiChunzhao Liu
Published in: Journal of materials chemistry. B (2022)
Simple biomolecule-based supramolecular nanomedicines hold great promise in cancer therapy, but their clinical translation is greatly hindered by low tumor-specificity and unsatisfactory antitumor performance. Herein, we developed an amino acid basedsupramolecular nanomedicine that could be co-activated by multiple stimuli in tumor tissue to trigger cascade catalytic reactions in situ for synergetic therapy. The supramolecular nanomedicine was developed based on a combination of coordination and hydrophobic noncovalent interactions among amphiphilic amino acids, glucose oxidase (GOx), copper ions, as well as doxorubicin (DOX)-camptothecin (CPT) prodrugs. The cascade reactions including the catalytic oxidation of glucose to generate H 2 O 2 , GSH reducing Cu 2+ to Cu + , a Fenton-like reaction between H 2 O 2 and Cu + to produce hydroxyl radicals (˙OH), and ˙OH-triggered rapid release of dual parent drugs were specifically activated in tumor cells. With these cascade reactions, the catalytic-chemo synergetic therapy was realized for high-efficiency tumor suppression.
Keyphrases