TY - JOUR
T1 - An NIR-II Responsive Nanoplatform for Cancer Photothermal and Oxidative Stress Therapy
AU - Huang, Bin
AU - Huang, Yuanpeng
AU - Han, Han
AU - Ge, Qiuyue
AU - Yang, Dongliang
AU - Hu, Yanling
AU - Ding, Meng
AU - Su, Yanqing
AU - He, Yanbin
AU - Shao, Jinjun
AU - Chu, Jianfeng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright © 2021 Huang, Huang, Han, Ge, Yang, Hu, Ding, Su, He, Shao and Chu.
PY - 2021/10/15
Y1 - 2021/10/15
N2 - Chemodynamic therapy as an emerging therapeutic strategy has been implemented for oncotherapy. However, the reactive oxygen species can be counteracted by the exorbitant glutathione (GSH) produced by the tumor cells before exerting the antitumor effect. Herein, borneol (NB) serving as a monoterpenoid sensitizer, and copper sulfide (CuS NPs) as an NIR-II photothermal agent were loaded in a thermo-responsive vehicle (NB/CuS@PCM NPs). Under 1,060-nm laser irradiation, the hyperthermia produced by CuS NPs can be used for photothermal therapy and melt the phase change material for drug delivery. In the acidity microenvironment, the CuS NPs released from NB/CuS@PCM NPs could degrade to Cu2+, then Cu2+ was reduced to Cu+ during the depletion of GSH. As Fenton-like catalyst, the copper ion could convert hydrogen peroxide into hydroxyl radicals for chemodynamic therapy. Moreover, the NB originated from NB/CuS@PCM NPs could increase the intracellular ROS content to improve the treatment outcome of chemodynamic therapy. The animal experimental results indicated that the NB/CuS@PCM NPs could accumulate at the tumor site and exhibit an excellent antitumor effect. This work confirmed that the combination of oxidative stress–induced damage and photothermal therapy is a potential therapeutic strategy for cancer treatment.
AB - Chemodynamic therapy as an emerging therapeutic strategy has been implemented for oncotherapy. However, the reactive oxygen species can be counteracted by the exorbitant glutathione (GSH) produced by the tumor cells before exerting the antitumor effect. Herein, borneol (NB) serving as a monoterpenoid sensitizer, and copper sulfide (CuS NPs) as an NIR-II photothermal agent were loaded in a thermo-responsive vehicle (NB/CuS@PCM NPs). Under 1,060-nm laser irradiation, the hyperthermia produced by CuS NPs can be used for photothermal therapy and melt the phase change material for drug delivery. In the acidity microenvironment, the CuS NPs released from NB/CuS@PCM NPs could degrade to Cu2+, then Cu2+ was reduced to Cu+ during the depletion of GSH. As Fenton-like catalyst, the copper ion could convert hydrogen peroxide into hydroxyl radicals for chemodynamic therapy. Moreover, the NB originated from NB/CuS@PCM NPs could increase the intracellular ROS content to improve the treatment outcome of chemodynamic therapy. The animal experimental results indicated that the NB/CuS@PCM NPs could accumulate at the tumor site and exhibit an excellent antitumor effect. This work confirmed that the combination of oxidative stress–induced damage and photothermal therapy is a potential therapeutic strategy for cancer treatment.
KW - chemodynamic therapy
KW - drug delivery
KW - phase change material
KW - photothermal ablation therapy
KW - responsive nanomaterial
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118244066&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/fbioe.2021.751757
DO - 10.3389/fbioe.2021.751757
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85118244066
SN - 2296-4185
VL - 9
JO - Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology
JF - Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology
M1 - 751757
ER -