4.8 Article

Hijacking Self-Assembly to Establish Intracellular Functional Nanoparticles

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue 31, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.202203027

Keywords

efferocytosis of erythrocytes; endogenous metabolites; intracellular self-assembly; nanomedicine targeting; vascular-disrupting agent

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32171372, 31872755]
  2. Jiangsu Outstanding Youth Funding [BK20190007]
  3. Logistics research projects [BWS20J017]
  4. Program of Jiangsu postgraduate research innovation [KYCX20_0049]

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A strategy of hijacking endogenous products of biological events is established to assemble functional intracellular nanoparticles, enhancing targeted drug delivery and inhibiting tumor growth.
The targeted transport of nanomedicines is often impeded by various biological events in the body. Viruses can hijack host cells and utilize intracellular transcription and translation biological events to achieve their replication. Inspired by this, a strategy to hijack endogenous products of biological events to assemble into intracellular functional nanoparticles is established. It has been shown that, following tumor vessel destruction therapy, injected cell permeable small molecule drugs bisphosphonate can hijack the hemorrhagic product iron and self-assemble into peroxidase-like nanoparticles within tumor-infiltrating macrophages. Unlike free drugs, the generated intercellular nanoparticles can specifically stress mitochondria, resulting in immune activation of macrophages in vitro and polarizing tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) from immunosuppressive to tumoricidal and increasing the recruitment of T cells deep within tumor. The hijacking self-assembly strategy significantly inhibits tumor growth compared with the treatment of vascular-disrupting agents alone. Using bisphosphonate to hijack the metabolite associated with hemorrhage, iron, to fabricate functional nanoparticles within specific cells, which may open up new nanotechnology for drug delivery and small molecular drug development.

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