| Literature DB >> 33174739 |
Jun Dai1, Yong Cheng2, Jun Wu2, Quan Wang2, Wenwen Wang1, Juliang Yang2, Zujin Zhao3, Xiaoding Lou2, Fan Xia2, Shixuan Wang1, Ben Zhong Tang3.
Abstract
Even with optimal surgery, 80% of patients with ovarian cancer will have recurrence. Adjuvant therapy can reduce the recurrence of tumors; however, the therapeutic effect is still not prominent. Herein, we designed a modular peptide probe (TCDTMP), which can be self-assembled into nanoparticles (NPs) by loading in miR-145-5p or VEGF-siRNA. In vivo, (1) preoperative administration of TCDTMP/miR-145-5p ensured that NPs were adequately accumulated in tumors through active targeting and increased the expression of miR-145-5p in tumors, thereby inducing tumor cell apoptosis. (2) Intraoperatively, most of the tumors were removed, while the microscopic residual tumors were largely eliminated by TCDTMP/miR-145-5p-mediated photodynamic therapy (PDT). (3) Postoperatively, TCDTMP/VEGF-siRNA were given for antiangiogenesis therapy, thus delaying the recurrence of tumors. This treatment was named a preoperative (TCDTMP/miR-145-5p)||intraoperative (surgery and PDT)||postoperative (TCDTMP/VEGF-siRNA) therapeutic system and abbreviated as the PIP therapeutic system, which reduced the recurrence of ovarian cancer in subcutaneous tumor models, intraperitoneal metastasis models, and patient-derived tumor xenograft models. Our findings provide a therapeutic system based on modular peptide probes to reduce the recurrence of ovarian cancer after surgery, which provides a perspective for the surgical management of ovarian cancer.Entities:
Keywords: gene therapy; modular peptide; ovarian cancer; photodynamic therapy; surgical management
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33174739 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b09818
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881