| Literature DB >> 35127533 |
Zhijing Yang1, Dongxu Wang2, Chenyu Zhang2, Huimin Liu1, Ming Hao1, Shaoning Kan1, Dianfeng Liu2, Weiwei Liu1,3.
Abstract
In recent years, the morbidity and mortality of gastrointestinal cancer have remained high in China. Due to the deep location of the gastrointestinal organs, such as gastric cancer, the early symptoms of cancer are not obvious. It is generally discovered at an advanced stage with distant metastasis and lymph node infiltration, making it difficult to cure. Therefore, there is a significant need for novel technologies that can effectively diagnose and treat gastrointestinal cancer, ultimately reducing its mortality. Gold nanoparticles (GNPs), a type of nanocarrier with unique optical properties and remarkable biocompatibility, have the potential to influence the fate of cancer by delivering drugs, nucleic acids to cancer cells and tissues. As a safe and reliable visualization agent, GNPs can track drugs and accurately indicate the location and boundaries of cancer, opening up new possibilities for cancer treatment. In addition, GNPs have been used in photodynamic therapy to deliver photosensitizers, as well as in combination with photothermal therapy. Therefore, GNPs can be used as a safe and effective nanomaterial in the treatment and diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer.Entities:
Keywords: cancer therapy; gastrointestinal cancer; gold nanoparticles; imaging; ncRNA
Year: 2022 PMID: 35127533 PMCID: PMC8807688 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.819329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Different shapes of GNPs.
Figure 2Delivery using GNPs to regulate tumor cell fate.
The important uses of GNPs in the diagnosis of gastrointestinal tumors.
| Particle name | Nanoparticle Size | Detection | Main results | Imaging modality | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AuNCs@SiO2-FA | ~58 nm | Gastric cancer | Targeting gastric cancer and exhibiting excellent optical property and X-ray absorbance | Fluorescence, CT imaging | ( |
| CG-GNPs | 20nm | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Accumulating in tumor and last for 7days | CT imaging | ( |
| cmHsp70-AuNPs | 54 ± 11 nm | Colorectal cancer | Targeting to colorectal cancer and accumulated in tumor sites | CT imaging | ( |
| PPHAuNCs-TNCs | 30nm | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | Accumulated in liver and FI/PAI dual-mode imaging | PAI, Fluorescence | ( |
| Ac-PE-AuNPs | 95.4 ± 2.4 nm | Hepatoma carcinoma | Accumulated in normal liver than in necrosis region to serve as negative CT imaging agent | CT imaging | ( |
| Fe3O4@Au@β-CD | 71.40nm | Gastric cancer | Targetng to gastric cancer cells and exhibit red fluorescence,and can serve as T2 contrast agent | MRI, Fluorescence | ( |
| GoldMag | ~50nm | Pancreatic cancer | Serve as serve as photothermal sensitizers, and MRI is feasible to quantify delivery. | MRI | ( |
Figure 3The applications of GNPs in cancer diagnosis.
The important uses of GNPs in the treatment and therapy of gastrointestinal tumors.
| Particle name | Nanoparticle Size | Cell lines | Functions | Therapy and Treatment | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GNC-Gal@CMaP | 51nm | CT26 | Induced immunogenic cell death and improve the anti-cancer efficiency of anti-PDL1 and TGF-β inhibitors. | PTT, Immunotherapy | ( |
| AuNCs/BSA-NPs | 33.8 nm | HCT116 | Inhibit the cell growth and tumor growth, good optical fluorescence imaging | PTT | ( |
| ~87.9 nm | |||||
| T-AuNPs | 85.39 ± 0.68nm | MKN7,MKN74,NCI-N87 | Inhibit the cell growth of Tmab-sensitive and Tmab-resistant gastric cancer cells through autophagy | Chemotherapy | ( |
| FU-CMC-EGCG-GNPs | 30~70 nm | MKN45 | Inhibit the tumor growth selectively. | Chemotherapy | ( |
| GNP-Gem | 5.4 ± 1 nm | PANC-1, ASPC-1 | Exert great anti-proliferative effect. | Chemotherapy | ( |
| Au-miR-let-7a NCs | 4nm | HepG2, SMMC-7721 | Tumor growth inhibition,bioimaging | Gene therapy, PTT | ( |
| GNC–siRNA | 16.6 ± 3.0 nm | PANC-1 | Knockdown the expression of NGF | Gene therapy | ( |
| FAL-ICG-HAuNS | 151 ± 4.6 nm | CT-26 | Improve the generation of ROS, inducing ER stress to enhance the immune response. | PTT, PDT, Immunotherapy | ( |
| ICG-PEI-HAuNS | 122.5 ± 13.5 nm | SKOV3 | Reduce the cell viability, induce cell apoptosis, enhance the level of SOSG. | PTT, PDT | ( |
Figure 4The use of PTT and PDT combination therapy to treat tumors.
Figure 5Gold nanoparticles combined with exosomes in cancer therapy and diagnosis.
Figure 6The advantages of GNPs in cancer therapy.