Self-Activating Therapeutic Nanoparticle: A Targeted Tumor Therapy Using Reactive Oxygen Species Self-Generation and Switch-on Drug Release.
Rae Hyung KangYumi KimJi Hyeon KimNa Hee KimHyun Min KoSeung-Hyeon LeeInseob ShimJong Seung KimHyeung-Jin JangDokyoung KimPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
One of the recent advances in nanotechnology within the medical field is the development of a nanoformulation of anticancer drugs or photosensitizers. Cancer cell-specific drug delivery and upregulation of the endogenous level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) are important in precision anticancer treatment. Within our article, we report a new therapeutic nanoformulation of cancer cell targeting using endogenous ROS self-generation without an external initiator and a switch-on drug release (ROS-induced cascade nanoparticle degradation and anticancer drug generation). We found a substantial cellular ROS generation by treating an isothiocyanate-containing chemical and functionalizing it onto the surface of porous silicon nanoparticles (pSiNPs) that are biodegradable and ROS-responsive nanocarriers. Simultaneously, we loaded an ROS-responsive prodrug (JS-11) that could be converted to the original anticancer drug, SN-38, and conducted further surface functionalization with a cancer-targeting peptide, CGKRK. We demonstrated the feasibility as a cancer-targeting and self-activating therapeutic nanoparticle in a pancreatic cancer xenograft mouse model, and it showed a superior therapeutic efficacy through ROS-induced therapy and drug-induced cell death. The work presented is a new concept of a nanotherapeutic and provides a more feasible clinical translational pathway.
Keyphrases
- reactive oxygen species
- drug delivery
- cancer therapy
- drug release
- cell death
- drug induced
- liver injury
- dna damage
- papillary thyroid
- mouse model
- signaling pathway
- cell cycle arrest
- young adults
- high glucose
- poor prognosis
- diabetic rats
- emergency department
- photodynamic therapy
- lymph node metastasis
- endothelial cells
- wound healing