Nanotechnology has been extensively studied and exploited for cancer treatment as nanoparticles can play a significant role as a drug delivery system. Compared to conventional drugs, nanoparticle-based drug delivery has specific advantages, such as improved stability and biocompatibility, enhanced permeability and retention effect, and precise targeting. The application and development of hybrid nanoparticles, which incorporates the combined properties of different nanoparticles, has led this type of drug-carrier system to the next level. In addition, nanoparticle-based drug delivery systems have been shown to play a role in overcoming cancer-related drug resistance. The mechanisms of cancer drug resistance include overexpression of drug efflux transporters, defective apoptotic pathways, and hypoxic environment. Nanoparticles targeting these mechanisms can lead to an improvement in the reversal of multidrug resistance. Furthermore, as more tumor drug resistance mechanisms are revealed, nanoparticles are increasingly being developed to target these mechanisms. Moreover, scientists have recently started to investigate the role of nanoparticles in immunotherapy, which plays a more important role in cancer treatment. In this review, we discuss the roles of nanoparticles and hybrid nanoparticles for drug delivery in chemotherapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy and describe the targeting mechanism of nanoparticle-based drug delivery as well as its function on reversing drug resistance.
Active exchangers dissipate the gradient of one substrate to accumulate nutrients, export xenobiotics and maintain cellular homeostasis. Mechanistic studies suggested that all exchangers share two fundamental properties: substrate binding is antagonistic and coupling is maintained by preventing shuttling of the empty transporter. The CLC Cl−: H+ exchangers control the homeostasis of cellular compartments in most living organisms but their transport mechanism remains unclear. We show that substrate binding to CLC-ec1 is synergistic rather than antagonistic: chloride binding induces protonation of a critical glutamate. The simultaneous binding of H+ and Cl− gives rise to a fully-loaded state incompatible with conventional mechanisms. Mutations in the Cl− transport pathway identically alter the stoichiometries of Cl−: H+ exchange and binding. We propose that the thermodynamics of synergistic substrate binding determine the stoichiometry of transport rather than the kinetics of conformational changes and ion binding.
Background: Branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs), essential nutrients including leucine, isoleucine, and valine, serve as a resource for energy production and the regulator of important nutrient and metabolic signals. Recent studies have suggested that dysfunction of BCAA catabolism is associated with the risk of cardiovascular disease. Platelets play an important role in cardiovascular disease, but the functions of BCAA catabolism in platelets remain unknown. Methods: The activity of human platelets from healthy subjects before and after ingestion of BCAAs was measured. Protein phosphatase 2Cm specifically dephosphorylates branched-chain α-keto acid dehydrogenase and thereby activates BCAA catabolism. Protein phosphatase 2Cm–deficient mice were used to elucidate the impacts of BCAA catabolism on platelet activation and thrombus formation. Results: We found that ingestion of BCAAs significantly promoted human platelet activity (n=5; P <0.001) and arterial thrombosis formation in mice (n=9; P <0.05). We also found that the valine catabolite α-ketoisovaleric acid and the ultimate oxidation product propionyl-coenzyme A showed the strongest promotion effects on platelet activation, suggesting that the valine/α-ketoisovaleric acid catabolic pathway plays a major role in BCAA-facilitated platelet activation. Protein phosphatase 2Cm deficiency significantly suppresses the activity of platelets in response to agonists (n=5; P <0.05). Our results also suggested that BCAA metabolic pathways may be involved in the integrin αIIbβ3–mediated bidirectional signaling pathway that regulates platelet activation. Mass spectrometry identification and immunoblotting revealed that BCAAs enhanced propionylation of tropomodulin-3 at K255 in platelets or Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing integrin αIIbβ3. The tropomodulin-3 K255A mutation abolished propionylation and attenuated the promotion effects of BCAAs on integrin-mediated cell spreading, suggesting that K255 propionylation of tropomodulin-3 is an important mechanism underlying integrin αIIbβ3–mediated BCAA-facilitated platelet activation and thrombosis formation. In addition, the increased levels of BCAAs and the expression of positive regulators of BCAA catabolism in platelets from patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus are significantly correlated with platelet hyperreactivity. Lowering dietary BCAA intake significantly reduced platelet activity in ob/ob mice (n=4; P <0.05). Conclusions: BCAA catabolism is an important regulator of platelet activation and is associated with arterial thrombosis risk. Targeting the BCAA catabolism pathway or lowering dietary BCAA intake may serve as a novel therapeutic strategy for metabolic syndrome–associated thrombophilia.
Quercetin alleviated hepatic steatosis by enhancing frataxin-mediated PINK1/Parkin-dependent mitophagy, highlighting a promising preventive strategy and mechanism for NAFLD by quercetin.
Aims Findings from our laboratory indicate that proinflammatory cytokines and their transcription factor, nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-κB), are increased in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and contribute towards the progression of heart failure. In this study, we determined whether NF-κB activation within the PVN contributes to sympathoexcitation via interaction with neurotransmitters in the PVN during the pathogenesis of heart failure. Methods and results Heart failure was induced in rats by left anterior descending coronary artery ligation. Sham-operated control (SHAM) or heart failure rats were treated for 4 weeks through bilateral PVN infusion with SN50, SN50M or vehicle via osmotic minipump. Rats with heart failure treated with PVN vehicle or SN50M (inactive peptide for SN50) had increased levels of glutamate, norepinephrine, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), superoxide, gp91phox (a subunit of NAD(P)H oxidase), phosphorylated IKKβ and NF-κB p65 activity, and lower levels of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and the 67-kDa isoform of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD67) in the PVN compared with those of SHAM rats. Plasma levels of cytokines, norepinephrine, epinephrine and angiotensin II, and renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) were increased in heart failure rats. Bilateral PVN infusion of SN50 prevented, the decreases in PVN GABA and GAD67, and the increases in RSNA and PVN glutamate, norepinephrine, TH, superoxide, gp91phox, phosphorylated IKKβ and NF-κB p65 activity observed in vehicle or SN50M treated heart failure rats. A same dose of SN50 given intraperitoneally did not affect neurotransmitters concentration in the PVN and was similar to vehicle treated heart failure rats. Conclusion These findings suggest that NF-κB activation in the PVN modulates neurotransmitters and contributes to sympathoexcitation in rats with ischemia-induced heart failure.
The ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters ABCG2 and ABCB1 perform ATP hydrolysis-dependent efflux of structurally highly diverse compounds, collectively called allocrites. Whereas much is known about allocrite-ABCB1 interactions, the chemical nature and strength of ABCG2-allocrite interactions have not yet been assessed. We quantified and characterized interactions of allocrite with ABCG2 and ABCB1 using a set of 39 diverse compounds. We also investigated potential allocrite binding sites based on available transporter structures and structural models. We demonstrate that ABCG2 binds its allocrites from the lipid membrane, despite their hydrophilicity. Hence, binding of allocrite to both transporters is a two-step process, starting with a lipid-water partitioning step, driven mainly by hydrophobic interactions, followed by a transporter binding step in the lipid membrane. We show that binding of allocrite to both transporters increases with the number of hydrogen bond acceptors in allocrites. Scrutinizing the transporter translocation pathways revealed ample hydrogen bond donors for allocrite binding. Importantly, the hydrogen bond donor strength is, on average, higher in ABCG2 than in ABCB1, which explains the higher measured affinity of allocrite for ABCG2. π-π stacking and π-cation interactions play additional roles in binding of allocrite to ABCG2 and ABCB1. With this analysis, we demonstrate that these membrane-mediated weak electrostatic interactions between transporters and allocrites allow for transporter promiscuity toward allocrites. The different sensitivities of the transporters to allocrites' charge and amphiphilicity provide transporter specificity. In addition, we show that the different hydrogen bond donor strengths in the two transporters allow for affinity tuning.
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