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Organelle‐Specific Anchored Delivery System Stretching a Reversal of Tumor Hypoxia Microenvironment to a Combinational Chemo‐Photothermal Therapy
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Citations
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References
2021
Year
NanotherapeuticsEngineeringAbstract Direct DeliveryBiological MicroenvironmentsCombinational Chemo‐photothermal TherapyBiomedical EngineeringRedox BiologyTumor BiologyNanomedicineTherapeutic NanomaterialsCancer Cell BiologyBioimagingTumor Hypoxia MicroenvironmentCancer MetabolismRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchPhotochemistryPhotodynamic TherapyNanobiotechnologyTumor TargetingPhotothermal TherapyTumor MicroenvironmentBiomolecular EngineeringMitochondrial FunctionTumor Growth InhibitionDrug Delivery SystemsDamages Mitochondrial DnaMedicine
Abstract Direct delivery to an organelle‐specific point can boost the efficacy of therapy procedures to new heights. Among other subcellular organelles, mitochondria generate ATP as intracellular powerhouse, and are associated with multiple aspects of tumorigenesis and tumor development. Here, a mitochondrial anchored biomimetic nanoplatform (CZACN) is designed and its reversal of tumor hypoxia microenvironment underlying the mitochondria‐located chemo‐photothermal therapy is studied. After shuttling into cancer cells, therapeutic payloads including cisplatin (CDDP) and Au nanozymes are controllably released in the ATP‐overexpressed mitochondria. CDDP generates O 2 • − , forms H 2 O 2 for a chemical fuel in the next reaction, and damages mitochondrial DNA. Meanwhile, the catalase‐like Au nanozymes catalyze the produced hydrogen peroxide for oxygen supply to relieve hypoxic tumor microenvironment, offering cytotoxic singlet oxygen against cancer cells under NIR treatment. As a result of cancer‐cell self‐recognition, mitochondria‐targeted therapy, and photothermal conversion ability, the fabricated CZACNs obtained 89.2 ± 3.70% of tumor growth inhibition under NIR irradiation and constrained the dose‐limiting toxicity of CDDP, as well. These findings reinforce the synergistic effect of organelle‐specific navigation and in situ oxygen self‐sufficiency for combinational chemo‐photothermal therapy.
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