Nanoscale photodynamic therapy (PDT) is an appealing antitumor modality for which apoptosis is the major mechanism of toxicity induction. It was postulated that the highly reactive singlet oxygen in PDT could deplete glutathione (GSH) and activate ferroptosis, the extent to which could be further manipulated by a redox-responsive nanocarrier. To validate this, a disulfide-bearing imidazole ligand coordinated with zinc to form an all-active metal organic framework (MOF) nanocarrier where a photosensitizer (chlorin e6/Ce6) was encapsulated. Regardless of light irradiation, the Ce6-loaded nanocarrier caused the depletion of intracellular GSH via the disulfide–thiol exchange reaction in a murine mammary carcinoma cell line (4T1). The GSH depletion further caused the inactivation of glutathione peroxide 4 (GPX4) and the enhancement of cytotoxicity that was alleviated by ferroptosis inhibitors. The superior in vivo antitumor efficacy of the all-active nanocarrier was corroborated in a 4T1 tumor-bearing mice model regarding tumor growth suppression and animal survival rate. The coadministration of an iron chelator weakened the antitumor potency of the nanocarrier due to ferroptosis inhibition, which was supported by the fact of tumor growth upsurge and the recovered GPX4 activity. The current work highlights the contribution of ferroptotic machinery to antitumor PDT via an activatable, adaptable, all-active MOF nanocarrier.
A novel, sensitive chemiluminescent (CL) immunoassay has been developed by taking advantage of a magnetic separation/mixing process and the amplification feature of colloidal gold label. First, the sandwich-type complex is formed in this protocol by the primary antibody immobilized on the surface of magnetic beads, the antigen in the sample, and the second antibody labeled with colloidal gold. Second, a large number of Au3+ ions from each gold particle anchored on the surface of magnetic beads are released after oxidative gold metal dissolution and then quantitatively determined by a simple and sensitive Au3+-catalyzed luminol CL reaction. Third, this protocol is evaluated for a noncompetitive immunoassay of a human immunoglobulin G, and a concentration as low as 3.1 x 10(-12) M is determined, which is competitive with colloidal gold-based anodic stripping voltammetry (ASV), colorimetric ELISA, or immunoassays based on fluorescent europium chelate labels. The high performance of this protocol is related to the sensitive CL determination of Au3+ ion (detection limit of 2 x 10(-10) M), which is 25 times higher than that by ASV at a single-use carbon-based screen-printed electrode. From the analytical chemistry point of view, this protocol will be quite promising for numerous applications in immunoassay and DNA hybridization.
Ferroptotic antitumor therapy has been compromised by various intracellular antioxidants, particularly glutathione and thioredoxin. Both are cofactors of glutathione peroxide 4 (GPX4) that act against oxidative stress via catalyzing the reduction of lipid peroxides. It was postulated that tailored polymer micelles could enhance ferroptotic antitumor efficacy via diminishing glutathione and thioredoxin under hypoxia. The aim was to engineer hypoxia-responsive micelles for selective enhancement of ferroptotic cell death in solid tumor. The polymer contains hydrophilic poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) that is linked by azobenzene linker with nitroimidazole-conjugated polypeptide. The tailored polymer could self-assemble into nanoscale micelles to encapsulate RAS-selective lethal small molecule 3, a covalent GPX4 inhibitor. Under hypoxia, the azobenzene moiety enabled PEG shedding and enhanced micelles uptake in 4T1 cells. Likewise, the nitroimidazole moiety was reduced by the overexpressed nitroreductase with reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) as the cofactor, resulting in transient depletion of NADPH. This impaired both the glutathione and thioredoxin redox cycle, leading to diminished intracellular glutathione and thioredoxin. The selective potency of ferroptotic micelles in depleting NADPH, glutathione and thioredoxin was further verified in vivo in the 4T1 tumor xenograft mice model. This work highlights the role of hypoxia-responsive polymers in enhancing the potency of ferroptotic inducers against solid tumors without additional side effects to healthy organs.
Developing cost-effective electrocatalysts operated in the same electrolyte for water splitting, including oxygen and hydrogen evolution reactions, is important for clean energy technology and devices. Defects in electrocatalysts strongly influence their chemical properties and electronic structures, and can dramatically improve electrocatalytic performance. However, the development of defect-activated electrocatalyst with an efficient and stable water electrolysis activity in alkaline medium remains a challenge, and the understanding of catalytic origin is still limited. Here, we highlight defect-enriched bifunctional eletrocatalyst, namely, three-dimensional iron fluoride-oxide nanoporous films, fabricated by anodization/fluorination process. The heterogeneous films with high electrical conductivity possess embedded disorder phases in crystalline lattices, and contain numerous scattered defects, including interphase boundaries, stacking faults, oxygen vacancies, and dislocations on the surfaces/interface. The heterocatalysts efficiently catalyze water splitting in basic electrolyte with remarkable stability. Experimental studies and first-principle calculations suggest that the surface/edge defects contribute significantly to their high performance.
Ferroptosis is an iron-dependent cell death pathway that can eradicate certain apoptosis-insensitive cancer cells. The ferroptosis-inducing molecules are tailored lipid peroxides whose efficacy is compromised in hypoxic solid tumor and lack of tumor selectivity. It has been demonstrated that ascorbate (Asc) in pharmacological concentrations can selectively kill cancer cells via accumulating hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) only in tumor extracellular fluids. It was hypothesized that Asc-induced, selective enrichment of H 2 O 2 in tumor coupled with Fe 3+ codelivery could simultaneously address the above two problems via boosting the levels of hydroxyl radicals and oxygen in the tumor site to ease peroxidation initiation and propagation, respectively. The aim of this work was to synergize the action of Asc with lipid-coated calcium phosphate (CaP) hybrid nanocarrier that can concurrently load polar Fe 3+ and nonpolar RSL3, a ferroptosis inducer with the mechanism of inhibiting lipid peroxide repair enzyme (GPX4). The hybrid nanocarriers showed accelerated cargo release at acidic conditions (pH 5.0). The combinational approach (Asc plus nanocarrier) produced significantly elevated levels of hydroxyl radicals, lipid peroxides, and depleted glutathione under hypoxia, which was accompanied with the strong cytotoxicity (IC 50 = 1.2 ± 0.2 μM) in the model 4 T1 cells. In the 4 T1 tumor-bearing xenograft mouse model, the intravenous nanocarrier delivery plus intraperitoneal Asc administration resulted in a superior antitumor performance in terms of tumor suppression, which did not produce supplementary adverse effects to the healthy organs. This work provides a novel approach to enhance the potency of ferroptotic nanomedicine against solid tumors without inducing additional side effects.
Nanoparticulate antitumor photodynamic therapy (PDT) has been suffering from the limited dose accumulation in tumor. Herein, we report dually hypoxia- and singlet oxygen-responsive polymeric micelles to efficiently utilize the photosensitizer deposited in the disease site and hence facilely improve PDT's antitumor efficacy. Tailored methoxy poly(ethylene glycol)-azobenzene-poly(aspartic acid) copolymer conjugate with imidazole as the side chains was synthesized. The conjugate micelles (189 ± 19 nm) obtained by self-assembly could efficiently load a model photosensitizer, chlorin e6 (Ce6) with a loading of 4.1 ± 0.5% (w/w). The facilitated cellular uptake of micelles was achieved by the triggered azobenzene collapse that provoked poly(ethylene glycol) shedding; rapid Ce6 release was enabled by imidazole oxidation that induced micelle disassembly. In addition, the singlet oxygen-mediated cargo release not only addressed the limited diffusion range and short half-life of singlet oxygen but also decreased the oxygen level, which could in turn enhance internalization and increase the intracellular Ce6 concentration. The hypoxia-induced dePEGylation and singlet oxygen-triggered Ce6 release was demonstrated both in aqueous buffer and in Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cells. The cellular uptake study demonstrated that the dually responsive micelles could deliver significantly more Ce6 to the cells, which resulted in a substantially improved cytotoxicity. This concurred well with the superior in vivo antitumor ability of micelles in a LLC tumor-bearing mouse model. This study presented an intriguing nanoplatform to realize interactively triggered photosensitizer delivery and improved antitumor PDT efficacy.
Nanoscale drug delivery platforms have been developed over the past four decades that have shown promising clinical results in several types of cancer and inflammatory disorders. These nanocarriers carrying therapeutic payloads are maximizing the therapeutic outcomes while minimizing adverse effects. Yet one of the major challenges facing drug developers is the dilemma of premature versus on-demand drug release, which influences the therapeutic regiment, efficacy and potential toxicity. Herein, we report on redox-sensitive polymer-drug conjugate micelles for on-demand intracellular delivery of a model active agent, curcumin. Biodegradable methoxy poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(lactic acid) copolymer (mPEG-PLA) was conjugated with curcumin via a disulfide bond or ester bond (control), respectively. The self-assembled redox-sensitive micelles exhibited a hydrodynamic size of 115.6 ± 5.9 (nm) with a zeta potential of -10.6 ± 0.7 (mV). The critical micelle concentration was determined at 6.7 ± 0.4 (μg mL(-1)). Under sink conditions with a mimicked redox environment (10 mM dithiothreitol), the extent of curcumin release at 48 h from disulfide bond-linked micelles was nearly three times higher compared to the control micelles. Such rapid release led to a lower half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) in HeLa cells at 18.5 ± 1.4 (μg mL(-1)), whereas the IC50 of control micelles was 41.0 ± 2.4 (μg mL(-1)). The cellular uptake study also revealed higher fluorescence intensity for redox-sensitive micelles. In conclusion, the redox-sensitive polymeric conjugate micelles could enhance curcumin delivery while avoiding premature release, and achieving on-demand release under the high glutathione concentration in the cell cytoplasm. This strategy opens new avenues for on-demand drug release of nanoscale intracellular delivery platforms that ultimately might be translated into pre-clinical and future clinical practice.
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