TY - JOUR
T1 - Acidity-Responsive Nanoreactors Destructed “Warburg Effect” for Toxic-Acidosis and Starvation Synergistic Therapy
AU - Zhu, Jiawei
AU - Cai, Hao
AU - Xu, Chengshuang
AU - Wang, Wenjun
AU - Song, Xuejiao
AU - Li, Buhong
AU - Shen, Yi
AU - Dong, Xiaochen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2023/11/15
Y1 - 2023/11/15
N2 - “Warburg Effect” shows that most tumor cells rely on aerobic glycolysis for energy supply, leading to malignant energy deprivation and an “internal alkaline external acid” tumor microenvironment. Destructing the “Warburg Effect” is an effective approach to inhibit tumor progression. Herein, an acidity-responsive nanoreactor (Au@CaP-Flu@HA) is fabricated for toxic acidosis and starvation synergistic therapy. In the nanoreactor, the fluvastatin (Flu) could reduce lactate efflux by inhibiting the lactate-proton transporter (monocarboxylate transporters, MCT4), resulting in intracellular lactate accumulation. Meanwhile, the glucose oxidase-mimic Au-nanocomposite consumes glucose to induce cell starvation accompanied by gluconic acid production, coupling with lactate to exacerbate toxic acidosis. Also, the up-regulated autophagic energy supply of tumor cells under energy deprivation and hypoxia aggravation is blocked by autophagy inhibitor CaP. Cellular dysfunction under pHi acidification and impaired Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) synthesis under starvation synergistically promote tumor cell apoptosis. Both in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrate that this combinational approach of toxic-acidosis/starvation therapy could effectively destruct the “Warburg Effect” to inhibit tumor growth and anti-metastatic effects.
AB - “Warburg Effect” shows that most tumor cells rely on aerobic glycolysis for energy supply, leading to malignant energy deprivation and an “internal alkaline external acid” tumor microenvironment. Destructing the “Warburg Effect” is an effective approach to inhibit tumor progression. Herein, an acidity-responsive nanoreactor (Au@CaP-Flu@HA) is fabricated for toxic acidosis and starvation synergistic therapy. In the nanoreactor, the fluvastatin (Flu) could reduce lactate efflux by inhibiting the lactate-proton transporter (monocarboxylate transporters, MCT4), resulting in intracellular lactate accumulation. Meanwhile, the glucose oxidase-mimic Au-nanocomposite consumes glucose to induce cell starvation accompanied by gluconic acid production, coupling with lactate to exacerbate toxic acidosis. Also, the up-regulated autophagic energy supply of tumor cells under energy deprivation and hypoxia aggravation is blocked by autophagy inhibitor CaP. Cellular dysfunction under pHi acidification and impaired Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) synthesis under starvation synergistically promote tumor cell apoptosis. Both in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrate that this combinational approach of toxic-acidosis/starvation therapy could effectively destruct the “Warburg Effect” to inhibit tumor growth and anti-metastatic effects.
KW - MCT4 inhibitors
KW - Warburg effect
KW - autophagy inhibition
KW - glucose oxidase-like catalytic activity
KW - toxic-acidosis/starvation therapy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85165265003&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/smll.202304058
DO - 10.1002/smll.202304058
M3 - 文章
C2 - 37475522
AN - SCOPUS:85165265003
SN - 1613-6810
VL - 19
JO - Small
JF - Small
IS - 46
M1 - 2304058
ER -