| Literature DB >> 30375848 |
Zheyu Shen1,2, Ting Liu3, Yan Li4, Joseph Lau2, Zhen Yang2, Wenpei Fan2, Zijian Zhou2, Changrong Shi3, Chaomin Ke3, Vladimir I Bregadze5, Swadhin K Mandal6, Yijing Liu2, Zihou Li1, Ting Xue1, Guizhi Zhu2,7, Jeeva Munasinghe8, Gang Niu2, Aiguo Wu1, Xiaoyuan Chen2.
Abstract
Cancer is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the world, but more cancer therapies are needed to complement existing regimens due to problems of existing cancer therapies. Herein, we term ferroptosis therapy (FT) as a form of cancer therapy and hypothesize that the FT efficacy can be significantly improved via accelerating the Fenton reaction by simultaneously increasing the local concentrations of all reactants (Fe2+, Fe3+, and H2O2) in cancer cells. Thus, Fenton-reaction-acceleratable magnetic nanoparticles, i.e., cisplatin (CDDP)-loaded Fe3O4/Gd2O3 hybrid nanoparticles with conjugation of lactoferrin (LF) and RGD dimer (RGD2) (FeGd-HN@Pt@LF/RGD2), were exploited in this study for FT of orthotopic brain tumors. FeGd-HN@Pt@LF/RGD2 nanoparticles were able to cross the blood-brain barrier because of its small size (6.6 nm) and LF-receptor-mediated transcytosis. FeGd-HN@Pt@LF/RGD2 can be internalized into cancer cells by integrin αvβ3-mediated endocytosis and then release Fe2+, Fe3+, and CDDP upon endosomal uptake and degradation. Fe2+ and Fe3+ can directly participate in the Fenton reaction, whereas the CDDP can indirectly produce H2O2 to further accelerate the Fenton reaction. The acceleration of Fenton reaction generates reactive oxygen species to induce cancer cell death. FeGd-HN@Pt@LF/RGD2 successfully delivered reactants involved in the Fenton reaction to the tumor site and led to significant inhibition of tumor growth. Finally, the intrinsic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) capability of the nanoparticles was used to assess and monitor tumor response to FT (self-MRI monitoring).Entities:
Keywords: Fenton reaction; ferroptosis therapy; magnetic nanoparticles; orthotopic glioblastoma; self-MRI monitoring
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30375848 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b06201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881