| Literature DB >> 30816393 |
Xiaoqiu Li1, Yangyang Zhao, Wei Jiang, Shuya Li, Meixiao Zhan, Hao Liu, Congjun Zhang, Hui Liang, Hang Liu, Ligong Lu, Yucai Wang.
Abstract
Cancer radiation therapy (RT) is limited by endogenous DNA repair of tumor cells and microenvironmental hypoxia in tumor tissues. Herein, we demonstrated an effective cancer chemo-radiotherapy strategy based on choline phosphate liposomal nanomedicines, which inhibit the intrinsic radioresistance of RT and concomitantly harness the RT-induced hypoxia to produce additional toxicity to overcome post-RT radioresistance. To achieve this strategy, a radiotherapy sensitizer, vorinostat, and a hypoxia-activated banoxantrone dihydrochloride (AQ4N) were simultaneously delivered to a tumor using liposomes composed of an inverted polarity lipid 2-((2,3-bis(oleoyloxy)propyl)dimethylammonio)ethyl ethyl phosphate (DOCPe). The DOCPe liposomes exhibited a longer blood circulation time and enhanced tumor accumulation, compared to their zwitterionic phosphocholine counterpart. The RT was sensitized by vorinostat to kill non-tolerant normoxic tumor cells efficiently. The irradiation aggravated hypoxia-activated AQ4N to further potentiate RT treatment. This chemo-radiotherapy combination showed excellent tumor treatment efficacy and is promising for future clinical translation.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30816393 DOI: 10.1039/c9bm00051h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomater Sci ISSN: 2047-4830 Impact factor: 6.843