Ultrasmall Zwitterionic Polypeptide-Coordinated Nanohybrids for Highly Efficient Cancer Photothermal Ferrotherapy.
Chang DuLei ZhouJiwen QianMeng HeZhi-Gang ZhangChuan-Liang FengYongming ZhangRong ZhangChang-Ming DongPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
Ferroptosis therapy (FT) based on the Fenton reaction of ferrous nanoparticles has been becoming a unique strategy for cancer treatment; however, current ferrous nanoparticles suffer from slower Fenton reaction kinetics, lower ferroptosis efficacy, and long-term toxicity, so it is urgent to construct biocompatible ferrous nanomaterials with highly efficient Fenton reaction activity for cancer FT. Inspired by single-atom catalysis and size-determined tumor penetration, we conceived an innovative strategy for constructing ultrasmall zwitterionic polypeptide-coordinated nanohybrids of PCGA@FeNP with about 6 nm by utilizing thiol/hydroxyl-iron cooperative coordination chemistry. The ultrasmall size, unsaturated ferrous coordination, and intracellular acidic pH could accelerate the Fenton reaction, thus boosting the efficacy of ferroptosis. Moreover, those coordinated nanohybrids exhibited prominent photothermia with 59.5% conversion efficiency, further accelerating the Fenton reaction and inducing a synergistic effect between FT and photothermal therapy (PTT). In vitro and in vivo GPX-4 expression ascertained that PCGA@FeNP indeed induced effective FT and synergistic FT-PTT. Remarkably, in vivo FT-PTT completely ablated 4T1 solid tumors by one treatment, presenting outstanding and synergistic antitumor efficacy via the photothermia-boosted ferroptosis and apoptosis pathways. This work supplies a practicable strategy to fabricate ultrasmall zwitterionic coordination nanohybrids for highly efficient cancer FT and FT-PTT theranostics with potential clinical transitions.
Keyphrases
- highly efficient
- cell death
- papillary thyroid
- hydrogen peroxide
- wastewater treatment
- reduced graphene oxide
- squamous cell
- oxidative stress
- photodynamic therapy
- cancer therapy
- stem cells
- iron oxide
- lymph node metastasis
- risk assessment
- cell proliferation
- young adults
- nitric oxide
- binding protein
- signaling pathway
- gold nanoparticles
- cell therapy
- bone marrow
- diabetic rats
- endothelial cells