Oncolytic Impediment/Promotion Balance Disruption by Sonosensitizer-Free Nanoplatforms Unfreezes Autophagy-Induced Resistance to Sonocatalytic Therapy.
Lu LuTaixia WangChao FangLi SongCheng QianZheng LvYujia FangXinyu LiuXin YuXiaohong XuChunxia SuFubo ChenKun ZhangPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Autophagy as a double-edged sword features an oncolytic impediment/promotion balance, which manipulates tumor progression. From this perspective, a sonosensitizer-free targeting oncolytic nanoplatform (SFTON) consisting of chloroquine (CQ) and porphyrin-structured metal centers (PMCS) was engineered to break this balance for enhancing antitumor activity. Porphyrin structure retention in a ZIF-8-derived hydrophobic carbon skeleton retained high stability and high sonocatalytic activity, and the hydrophobic carbon skeleton capable of adsorbing air provided cavitation nuclei for further elevating sonocatalytic activity. More significantly, the encapsulated CQ as the autophagy inhibitor reprogrammed autophagy, terminated the autophagy-induced self-protection or self-detoxification, and unfroze the resistances to reactive oxygen species (ROS) therapy associated with ROS accumulation and ROS activity. Systematic experiments reveal the action principles and validate that the induced apoptosis and blockaded autophagosome escalation into the autolysosome were two activated pathways to magnify the antitumor sonocatalytic therapy. Contributed by these actions, the SFTON-unlocked oncolytic impediment/promotion balance disruption strategy acquired considerable antitumor outcomes in vivo and in vitro against liver tumor progression, especially after combining with AS1411-mediated active targeting. This impediment/promotion balance disruption enabled by the SFTON can serve as a general method to elevate ROS-based antitumor activity.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- reactive oxygen species
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- signaling pathway
- dna damage
- photodynamic therapy
- diabetic rats
- poor prognosis
- cancer therapy
- high glucose
- type diabetes
- ionic liquid
- drug delivery
- mesenchymal stem cells
- metabolic syndrome
- clinical trial
- bone marrow
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- single cell
- long non coding rna
- adipose tissue
- genome wide
- study protocol
- drug release
- electron transfer