| Literature DB >> 36175957 |
Mengjiao Xu1, Liu Yang1, Yanjie Lin2, Yao Lu1, Xiaoyue Bi1, Tingting Jiang1, Wen Deng1, Lu Zhang1, Wei Yi3, Yao Xie4,5, Minghui Li6,7.
Abstract
Primary liver cancer has become the second most fatal cancer in the world, and its five-year survival rate is only 10%. Most patients are in the middle and advanced stages at the time of diagnosis, losing the opportunity for radical treatment. Liver cancer is not sensitive to chemotherapy or radiotherapy. At present, conventional molecularly targeted drugs for liver cancer show some problems, such as short residence time, poor drug enrichment, and drug resistance. Therefore, developing new diagnosis and treatment methods to effectively improve the diagnosis, treatment, and long-term prognosis of liver cancer is urgent. As an emerging discipline, nanobiotechnology, based on safe, stable, and efficient nanomaterials, constructs highly targeted nanocarriers according to the unique characteristics of tumors and further derives a variety of efficient diagnosis and treatment methods based on this transport system, providing a new method for the accurate diagnosis and treatment of liver cancer. This paper aims to summarize the latest progress in this field according to existing research and the latest clinical diagnosis and treatment guidelines in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), as well as clarify the role, application limitations, and prospects of research on nanomaterials and the development and application of nanotechnology in the diagnosis and treatment of HCC.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical theranostics; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Nanobiomedical technology; Tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36175957 PMCID: PMC9524074 DOI: 10.1186/s12951-022-01615-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanobiotechnology ISSN: 1477-3155 Impact factor: 9.429
Fig. 1Mind map of the manuscript
Diagnostic Nanocarriers Delivery Agents for Hepatocellular Carcinoma
| Nanocarriers | Diagnostic Agent | Technique | Target cell | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nanobubbles (NBs) | Nanobubbles; Pro-bexarotene NBs; NBs-GPC3-rGO; Poly(oxalate-co-curcumin) (POC) | Ultrasound imaging; Nano-knife | HCC cell lines, HepG2 | [ |
| Dendrimer | Polydopamine | CT and PTT | HepG2 | [ |
| Carbon Dots (CDs) | Gd | MRI | HepG2 | [ |
| Calcium phosphate NPs | Gd-DTPA | MRI | BEL-7402,HepG2 | [ |
| Silica NPs | Gd; Gold NPs | MRI and PDT | BNL 1 ME A. 7R.1 cell | [ |
| Graphene Oxide-Based Nanocarriers | Gd | MRI | Human hepatoma cells | [ |
| Metal oxide NPs (Iron, Zinc) | Gd | MRI | HepG2 | [ |
| Superparamagnetic Iron-Oxide NPs(SPIONs) | Gd; Iron oxide | MRI | HCC cell lines | [ |
| Micelles | Micelles; SPION; Gd | MRI/UCL | HepG2 | [ |
Lipid NPs; Vesicle NPs; Liposome | Gd; Quantum dots | MRI/PAI | HepG2 | [ |
| Polymeric NPs | Gd-DTPA; SPION | MRI | HCC cell lines | [ |
Therapeutic Nanocarriers Delivery Agents for Hepatocellular Carcinoma
| Nanocarriers | Drugs | Target cell | Anticancer Mechanism | Outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inorganic | Nanoshells | Sorafenib; Doxorubicin; Oxaliplatin | HepG2 | Photothermal therapy; Codelivery of drugs | Inhibit cell proliferation and minimize the resistance of HCC |
| Inorgnic Nanofibers | Doxorubicin | SMMC-7721, H22 tumor | Delivery of drugs | Provide good tumor-targeting activity; Prolonged drug release with lower tumor cytotoxicity; Prevent tumor recurrence | |
| Graphene Oxide-Based Nanocarriers | Doxorubicin | Hepatoma cells | Delivery of drugs | Exhibit a cytotoxic effect on liver cancer cells | |
| Calcium NPs | Sorafenib; Doxorubicin; Immunosuppressive agents; Therapeutic genes | HepG2, HepG2/ADR,SMMC-7721,A549,BEL-7402 | Delivery of drugs and genes | Enhance anticancer effect with lower cytotoxicity | |
| Metal oxide NPs (Iron, Zinc, Alumina) | Sorafenib; Doxorubicin; Paclitaxel; Therapeutic genes | Hep-2,HepG2,Hep3B,Hepa1-6,Huh-7,SMMC-7721 | Membrane disruption/ROS production; Delivery of drugs and genes; Magnetic field induces lysosomal leakage; Magnetic hyperthermia | Induce cytotoxicity and apoptosis of HCC cells; Efficient tumor imaging | |
| Silver NPs | – | HT29,HepG2 | ROS formation/apoptosis induction; Disruption of intercellular proteins; Apoptosis through caspase expression | Induce apoptosis of HepG2 cells | |
| Platinum NPs | – | HepG2 | Release of Pt(II) ions | Enhance antitumor activity with fewer side effects | |
| Gold NPs | Cisplatin; Doxorubicin; Capecitabine; 5-FU; Therapeutic genes | HepG2 & resistant HepG2, HepG2-C3A, H22, HCC-LM3-fLuc, Huh-7, HepB3, HepB5, A549, MCF-7 | Cationic cellular uptake/oxidative stress; Cell uptake through peptide conjugation; Gold atom-intercellular protein interaction; Delivery of 5-FU; photothermal therapy; Immunotherapy, conjugation with SM5-1; Gold-protein interaction/Radiotherapy; miR-375 replacement therapy | Effectively inhibit the growth and resistance of HCC cells; Reduce toxicity systematically | |
| Silica NPs | Doxorubicin; Cetuximab; Cisplatin; Therapeutic genes | H22SMMC-7721 cell lines, HepG2, PLC, BEL-7402, QGY7703 | Delivery of drugs; Suicide gene delivery and gene regulation; Magnetic hyperthermia; Photothermal therapy | Effective drug-releasing ability and efficient tumor-homing; Better antitumor activity; Reduce toxicity systematically | |
| Selenium NPs | Doxorubicin; Baicalin Therapeutic genes | HegG2,HepG2215 | Delivery of drugs and genes | Inhibit tumor growth; Mitigate harmful effects from almost any drug at the delivery area | |
| Janus NPs | Doxorubicin; Docetaxel | HepG2,H22 | Delivery of drugs; Photothermal therapy | Effectively enhance tumor targeting and internalization in selective and safe chemotherapy for multidimensional HCC theranostics | |
| Magnetic Nanoclusters | Doxorubicin | HCC cell lines | Sustained drug loading and release; In vivo MRI of intra-tumoral delivery | Significantly enhance liver cancer cell death | |
| Superparamagnetic Iron-Oxide NPs (SPIONs) | Doxorubicin; Curcumin | HCC cell lines,HepG2 | Delivery of drugs and as therapeutics themselves; Targeted MR imaging of HCC; Magnetic hyperthermia | Effectively inhibit HCC cell growth | |
| Organic | Chitin and chitosan-based NPs | Doxorubicin | HepG2,H22,LO2,HU7,SMMC-7721 | Delivery of drugs; mRNA apoptotic gene expression | Kill HCC cell lines; Higher antitumor activity; Stronger fluorescent intensity shown in tumor tissue |
| Polysaccharide NPs | Doxorubicin; Paclitaxel | HepG2,H22,SMMC-7721 | Delivery of drugs | Intrinsic liver targeting capability to incorporate multiple targeting and therapeutic approaches | |
| Micelles | Sorafenib Doxorubicin | HCC cell lines, HepG2 | Provides specific targeted action against HCC | Good tumor growth inhibition and overall survival rate | |
Albumin NPs; Peptide NPs | Doxorubicin; Paclitaxel; Therapeutic genes | HepG2,Huh7 | Delivery of drugs and genes | Significantly enhance antitumor efficiency in HCC | |
| Other polymer NPs | Doxorubicin; 10-hydroxycamptothecin; Therapeutic genes | HepG2,Hep3B,Hepa-1.6,C3A,SK-HEP-1 | Delivery of drugs and genes; Photothermal therapy | Multi-functionality of DDS in specific antitumor therapy | |
| Organic Nanofibers | Cisplatin; Doxorubicin; Therapeutic genes | HCC cell lines,EMT6 | Delivery of drugs and genes | Provide good tumor-targeting activity; Significantly inhibit metastasis and tumor growth of liver cancer cells; Prevent tumor recurrence | |
| Carbon Nanotubes | Doxorubicin | HCC cell lines,SMMC-7721,H22 | Delivery of drugs; Specific cancer imaging and selectivity of HCC; Photothermal therapy | Kill HCC cell lines; Repress liver cancer growth | |
| Carbon Dots (CDs) | Doxorubicin | HepG2,HL-7702 | Delivery of drugs; Active anticancer effects through direct pyrolysis of an organic therapeutic; Restrains migration for adjuvant therapy; Increased efficiency of radiotherapy | Multi-functionality of DDS in specific antitumor therapy | |
| Liposomes | Cisplatin; Sorafenib; Doxorubicin; 5-FU; Therapeutic genes | HepG2,H22 | Delivery of drugs and genes | Longer imaging time and higher signal enhancement; Good inhibition of cell growth | |
Lipid NPs; Vesicle NPs | Sorafenib; Doxorubicin; Therapeutic genes | HepG2, Hep3B, Huh7 | Delivery of drugs and genes | Significantly enhanced antitumor effects Efficiency in HCC | |
| Hydrogel NPs | Cisplatin; Therapeutic genes | HepG2, Hep3B, H22 | Delivery of drugs and genes | Efficient intracellular drug release and subsequent induction of tumor cell death | |
| Dendrimer | Doxorubicin | HepG2 | Enhance the uptake of drug; Increases the cytotoxicity and anticancer effect | Better antitumor efficiency | |
| Polyethylene glycol (PEG) NPs | Sorafenib; Vandetanib | HepG2, BEL7402 | Delivery of drugs | Capability of producing promising drug delivery | |
| Polylactic-Co-Glycolic Acid (PLGA) NPs | Sorafenib; Selumetinib; Docetaxel Brucine; Therapeutic genes | HepG2,Hep3B, HCC1, SK-Hep1, JHH-7,BEL7402,SK-Hep1,HL-7702 | Delivery of and genes | Increase drug loading capacity and biocompatibility; Effectively suppress tumor cell proliferation; Improve antitumor efficiency | |
| Metal–organic frameworks (MOF) NPs | Dihydroartemisinin | HepG2,HCT116,MCF-7 | Delivery of drugs | Enhanced antitumor efficiency in HCC with low cytotoxicity and side effects | |
| Upconversion NPs | doxorubicin and hydroxycamptothecin(HCPT) | HepG2 | Phothermal therapy; codelivery of drugs | Multimodal antitumor function in reducing tumor volume to almost zero in vivo | |
Fig. 2Cell–cell communication by extracellular vesicles
Fig. 3Representation of the production and mechanism of miRNAs
Fig. 4Representation of the production and mechanism of siRNA-mediated gene silencing (ADP adenosine diphosphate, ATP adenosine triphosphate, siRNA small interfering RNA, mRNA messenger RNA, RISC RNA-induced silencing complex)
Fig. 5Strategies for iRNA therapy of HCC-promoting genes and upregulation of tumor suppressor genes