Publication | Closed Access
Inhibiting Osteolytic Breast Cancer Bone Metastasis by Bone‐Targeted Nanoagent via Remodeling the Bone Tumor Microenvironment Combined with NIR‐II Photothermal Therapy
33
Citations
56
References
2023
Year
NanomedicineNanotherapeuticsBone‐targeted NanoagentTherapeutic NanomaterialsPhotodynamic TherapyTumor GrowthMedicineBreast CancerNir‐ii Photothermal TherapyNano-drug DeliveryBiomedical EngineeringTumor TargetingPhotothermal TherapyRadiation OncologyBone MetastasisTumor MicroenvironmentHealth Sciences
Bone is one of the prone metastatic sites of patients with advanced breast cancer. The "vicious cycle" between osteoclasts and breast cancer cells plays an essential role in osteolytic bone metastasis from breast cancer. In order to inhibit bone metastasis from breast cancer, NIR-II photoresponsive bone-targeting nanosystems (CuP@PPy-ZOL NPs) are designed and synthesized. CuP@PPy-ZOL NPs can trigger the photothermal-enhanced Fenton response and photodynamic effect to enhance the photothermal treatment (PTT) effect and thus achieve synergistic anti-tumor effect. Meanwhile, they exhibit a photothermal enhanced ability to inhibit osteoclast differentiation and promote osteoblast differentiation, which reshaped the bone microenvironment. CuP@PPy-ZOL NPs effectively inhibited the proliferation of tumor cells and bone resorption in the in vitro 3D bone metastases model of breast cancer. In a mouse model of breast cancer bone metastasis, CuP@PPy-ZOL NPs combined with PTT with NIR-II significantly inhibited the tumor growth of breast cancer bone metastases and osteolysis while promoting bone repair to achieve the reversal of osteolytic breast cancer bone metastases. Furthermore, the potential biological mechanisms of synergistic treatment are identified by conditioned culture experiments and mRNA transcriptome analysis. The design of this nanosystem provides a promising strategy for treating osteolytic bone metastases.
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