| Literature DB >> 33205940 |
Peng Liu1, Xuanjun Liu1, Yan Cheng1, Shenghui Zhong1,2, Xinyi Shi1, Shengfeng Wang1,3, Miao Liu1,4, Jinsong Ding1, Wenhu Zhou1.
Abstract
The combination of gene therapy with chemotherapeutics provides an efficacious strategy for enhanced tumor therapy. RNA-cleaving DNAzyme has been recognized as a promising gene-silencing tool, while its combination with chemotherapeutic drugs has been limited by the lack of an effective codelivery system to allow sufficient intracellular DNAzyme activation, which requires specific metal ions as a cofactor. Here, a self-activatable DNAzyme/drug core-shell codelivery system is fabricated to combat triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). The hydrophobic chemotherapeutic, rapamycin (RAP), is self-assembled into the pure drug nanocore, and the metal-organic framework (MOF) shell based on coordination between Mn2+ and tannic acid (TA) is coated on the surface to coload an autophagy-inhibiting DNAzyme. The nanosystem efficiently delivers the payloads into tumor cells, and upon endocytosis, the MOF shell is disintegrated to release the therapeutics in response to an acidic endo/lysosome environment and intracellular glutathione (GSH). Notably, the coreleased Mn2+ serves as the cofactor of DNAzyme for effective self-activation, which suppresses the expression of Beclin 1 protein, the key initiator of autophagy, resulting in a significantly strengthened antitumor effect of RAP. Using tumor-bearing mouse models, the nanosystem could passively accumulate into the tumor tissue, impose potent gene-silencing efficacy, and thus sensitize chemotherapy to inhibit tumor growth upon intravenous administration, providing opportunities for combined gene-drug TNBC therapy.Entities:
Keywords: DNAzyme; autophagy; cancer therapy; metal−organic framework; rapamycin; self-activation; stimuli response
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33205940 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c15089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229