| Literature DB >> 34201333 |
Binita Shrestha1, Lijun Wang1, Eric M Brey1, Gabriela Romero Uribe1, Liang Tang1.
Abstract
Cancer is a heterogeneous and complex disease. Traditional cancer therapy is associated with low therapeutic index, acquired resistance, and various adverse effects. With the increasing understanding of cancer biology and technology advancements, more strategies have been exploited to optimize the therapeutic outcomes. The rapid development and application of nanomedicine have motivated this progress. Combinational regimen, for instance, has become an indispensable approach for effective cancer treatment, including the combination of chemotherapeutic agents, chemo-energy, chemo-gene, chemo-small molecules, and chemo-immunology. Additionally, smart nanoplatforms that respond to external stimuli (such as light, temperature, ultrasound, and magnetic field), and/or to internal stimuli (such as changes in pH, enzymes, hypoxia, and redox) have been extensively investigated to improve precision therapy. Smart nanoplatforms for combinational therapy have demonstrated the potential to be the next generation cancer treatment regimen. This review aims to highlight the recent advances in smart combinational therapy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; chemotherapy; combinational; multi-functional; smart nanoparticles; stimuli-responsive; treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34201333 PMCID: PMC8227511 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13060853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.525
Figure 1Illustration of the design for smart nanoplatform. This illustration represents various nanoparticles, therapeutic molecules, targeting moieties, and different types of internal or external stimulus that are commonly used to design smart nanoparticles. For instance, gold nanoparticles can be functionalized with therapeutic molecules through a pH sensitive linker. Moreover, these nanoplatforms can be decorated with different targeting moieties such as peptide or antibodies for selective targeting. The acidic pH triggers in tumor cells release the chemotherapeutic agent by cleaving the pH responsive linker (chemotherapy). Furthermore, these gold nanoparticles can be used as a photothermal agent for thermal ablation of cancer cells (photothermal therapy). To summarize, various combinations of nanoparticles, therapeutic and/or targeting molecules, and internal/external stimulus can be employed to design and develop smart nanoplatforms.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of pH responsive mesoporous silica nanoparticle for the sequential delivery of CPT and 5-fluorouracil. The pores in the mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MCM-41) were loaded with CPT (Drug 1). Then, the pores were capped with 5-fluorouracil derivative (Drug 2) to prevent premature release at physiological pH through a stable H bond created with the Stalk located on the surface of the MCM-41. At acidic pH, the protonation of Stalk triggers the release of 5-fluorouracil followed by the release of CPT through disruption of Stalk-cap bonds. Reproduced from [141] with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 3(A) Schematic of GSH responsive human serum albumin (HSA) nanocarrier for chemo-photothermal therapy. HSA nanoparticles were synthesized using the reduction-reassembly method. HSA molecules were reduced using excessive GSH to expose a large amount of reactive sulfhydryl groups. ICG and DOX were encapsulated in HSA nanoparticles. HSA nanoparticles were formed due to formation of new formed disulfide bond during the solvent removal process. (B) NIR radiation was used for photothermal ablation of tumor cells. Moreover, NIR-mediated slight hyperthermia was used for promoting the cellular uptake of HSA nanoparticles to amplify the therapeutic efficacy of DOX. (C) DOX release profile from different groups in presence or absence of GSH. (D) Temperature change in response to NIR irradiation. (E) Tumor growth curve of 4T1 tumor-bearing mice in different treatment groups. Adapted with permission from [157]. *** p < 0.001. Copyright 2020 American Chemical Society.
Figure 4(A) Schematic diagram of multi-responsive nanocarrier for multi-modal therapy. This design uses DOX- and HNPa photosensitizer-loaded chitosan as a core (CDH). The chitosan is further conjugated with folate (FCDH) for targeting purposes. The FCDH core is conjugated to graphene oxide through amide bond and π–π conjugation between FCDH core and graphene oxide (GFCDH). (B) The pH and GSH responsive release of photosensitizer HNP. (C) Laser irradiation (808 nm and 0.8 Wcm−1) triggered the increase in temperature. (D) UV-Vis spectra of nanocomposite loaded with diphenylisobenzofuran at different illumination times. A decrease in absorbance peak at 415 nm indicates singlet oxygen formation. (E) Cytotoxicity profile of DOX, HNPa, and nanocomposite at various concentrations. Reproduced from [164] with permission from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) and The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Recent examples of smart nanoplatforms for combinational therapy.
| Types of | Nanoparticles Used | Therapeutic Agent | Stimulus | Active | Study | Cancer Types/ | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemo Combinational therapy | Phospholipid-hyaluronic acid based nanoparticles | MTX and HCPT | pH and esterase | Folate and CD44 | In vivo | Breast cancer/ | [ |
| Core: Mesoporous magnetic nanoparticles | DOX and Curcumin | Temperature | None | In vitro | Cervical cancer/ | [ | |
| Core: Chitosan coated HA and DOX | DOX and PTX | pH | None | In vitro | Ostrosarcoma/ | [ | |
| Chemo-Energy Combinational | Core: MnO2 coated Gold nanorods as a core | DOX, gold nanorods | GSH, H2O2, Light | Cancer cell membrane | In vivo | Breast cancer/ | [ |
| Cystein functionalized iron oxide core and CuS attached BSA shell nanoparticles | PTX and CuS | Light | Magnet | In vivo | Cervical cancer/ | [ | |
| Cerasome-forming lipid nanoparticles | DOX and DiR | Temperature, Light | None | In vivo | Breast cancer/ | [ | |
| poly-ε-caprolactone nanoparticles | PTX and IR780 | Light | LHRH peptide | In vivo | Ovarian cancer/ST30 cells | [ | |
| ATP-aptamer, rC-DNA, and rG-DNA modified gold nanoparticles | DOX and gold nanoparticles | pH and ATP | None | In vivo | Cervical cancer/ | [ | |
| Cyclometalated Ir (III) complex micelles | CPT and Ir (III) compound | GSH | Folic acid | In vitro | Cervical cancer/ | [ | |
| Core: Upconversion/downconversion nanoparticles | DOX and MB | H2O2 and GSH | None | In vivo | Cervical cancer/ | [ | |
| Chondroitin sulfate-chlorin e6- lipoic acid nanocarrier | DTX and Chlorin e6 | GSH and ultrasound | Chondrotin sulfate | In vivo | Melanoma/ | [ | |
| Chemo-gene Combinational Therapy | PEI coated gold nanospheres | DOX and PLK1 siRNA | pH | None | In vitro | Breast cancer/ | [ |
| Core: Zinc oxide | DOX, DNAzyme, and polydopamine | pH, GSH, and Light | None | In vivo | Lung cancer/ | [ | |
| PEI weaved mesoporous silica nanoparticles | DOX and miRNA-145 | GSH | WL8 peptide | In vivo | Colorectal cancer/ | [ | |
| Ag2S QD coated mesoporous silica nanoparticles | DOX and survivin antisense oligonucleotide | Biotin | Folic acid and desthiobiotin | In vivo | Cervical cancer/ | [ | |
| DNA functionalized gold nanoparticles | DOX and BCl-2 siRNA | miRNA-21 and miRNA-10b | miRNA-21 and miRNA-10b | In vitro | Breast cancer/ | [ | |
| Chitosan based nanoparticles | PTX and single guidedVEGFR2/Cas9 plasmid | pH | Lactobionic acid | In vivo | Hepato carcinoma/ | [ | |
| Chemo-Immuno Combinational Therapy | HA coated Triphenylphosphonium nanoparticles | DOX, Ionidamine, and anti-PD-L1( seperately) | Hyaluronidase and GSH | HA | In vivo | Breast cancer/ | [ |
| Metal organic frameworks | DOX and glucose oxidase | GSH | Cancer cell membrane | In vivo | Breast cancer/ | [ | |
| Polymeric nanocubes | DOX and plasmid ovalbumin | pH | None | In vivo | Melanoma/ | [ | |
| T-cell membrane covered HA grafted copolymer nanoparticles | Curcumin and T-cell membrane (acts as PD-L1 antibody) | pH and GSH | HA | In vivo | Melanoma/ | [ | |
| PEG and poly(SN38-co-4-vinylpyridine) grafted nano gapped gold nanoparticles | SN38 and BLZ-945 | pH and GSH | None | In vivo | Breast cancer/ | [ | |
| Calcium carbonate containing PLGA-PEG nanoparticles | DOX and alkylated NLG919 | pH | None | In vivo | Breast cancer/ | [ |
Abbreviations: HCPT: 10-Hydroxycamptothecin; CD44: Cluster dependent 44; DiR: 1,1′-Dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindotricarbocyanine iodide; LHRH: luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; MB: Methylene blue; Ag2S: Silver sulfide; QD: Quantum dots; VEGFR2: Vascular growth factor receptor 2; DTX: Docetaxel; HA: Hyaluronic acid; PEG: Polyethylene glycol.