NIR-II Responsive Hydrogel as an Angiogenesis Inhibition Agent for Tumor Microenvironment Reprogramming.
Senfeng ZhaoLing ZhangLiu DengJiang OuyangQianqian XuXinyu GaoZhilin ZengYou-Nian LiuPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2021)
Regulation of angiogenesis is a great challenge for effective anticancer therapy. Generally, anti-angiogenic therapies are focused on inhibition of inducers involved in pro-angiogenic communication pathways. Despite the great potential of anti-angiogenic therapy, engineering efficient angiogenesis inhibition agents (AIAs) is still a formidable challenge, since most anti-angiogenic therapies are limited due to the cancer recurrence via compensatory expression of different angiogenic mediators. Herein, we present a new strategy of near-infrared-II (NIR-II) responsive hydrogel AIAs, constructed by incorporation of nitric oxide (NO) precursor (BNN6) and 2D WO2.9 nanosheets within hydrogel (WB@hydrogel). Because of the defect/2D engineering, the bandgap of the WO2.9 nanosheets narrows, which extends the absorption to the NIR-II region. It offers a favorable NIR-II controlled manner for NO generation through irradiation time and light intensity. The continuous supply of NO can activate the expression of wild-type p53 protein and further reverse the transcriptional expression of pro- and anti-angiogenic factors of the tumor microenvironment (TME), subsequently alternating pro-angiogenic TME to anti-angiogenic TME. In the murine tumor model, this method achieved high tumor growth inhibition (TGI) rate and excellent anti-recurrence efficiency.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- drug delivery
- wound healing
- nitric oxide
- photodynamic therapy
- endothelial cells
- drug release
- anti inflammatory
- fluorescent probe
- binding protein
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- transcription factor
- stem cells
- wild type
- gene expression
- small molecule
- oxidative stress
- hydrogen peroxide
- heat shock
- heat stress
- smoking cessation