Publication | Closed Access
Functionalized Selenium Nanosystem as Radiation Sensitizer of <sup>125</sup>I Seeds for Precise Cancer Therapy
70
Citations
56
References
2017
Year
Although radiotherapy has been extensively applied in cancer treatment, external beam radiation therapy is still unable to avoid damage to adjacent normal tissues in the process of delivering a sufficient radiation dose to the tumor sites of patients. To overcome this limitation, chemoradiotherapy, as a combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy of a radioactive seed, has been proposed to decrease the damage to tumor-surrounding tissues and enhance the radiosensitivity of solid tumors. In this study, we designed and synthesized folic acid-conjugated selenium nanoparticles (FA@SeNPs) as a cancer-targeting agent that could be synergistically enhanced by radioactive <sup>125</sup>I seeds to realize anticancer efficacy and inhibited colony formation ability. Interestingly, when compared with X-ray irradiation, <sup>125</sup>I seeds demonstrate a larger synergistic effect with the FA@SeNPs, drastically increasing reactive oxygen species overproduction to trigger apoptosis and influencing the cell cycle distribution in human breast cancer cells, inducing DNA damage and activating the mitogen-activated protein kinase and p53 signaling pathways. Moreover, this combination treatment demonstrates better in vivo antitumor activity and lower systemic toxicity. Therefore, this study demonstrates a new strategy for using functionalized SeNPs as a radiation sensitizer for <sup>125</sup>I seeds for cancer therapy.
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