4.8 Article

Wireless electrical stimulation at the nanoscale interface induces tumor vascular normalization

Journal

BIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages 399-408

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2022.03.027

Keywords

Calcium distribution; Mechano-electrical conversion; Piezoelectric barium titanate; Tumor vascular normalization; Wireless electrical stimulation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51932002, 52072127, 51903087, 52003085, 21975079]
  2. Science and Technology Program of Guangzhou [202002030308]

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This study proposes a wireless electrical stimulation strategy to achieve tumor vascular normalization by breaking bioelectric homeostasis within cells. Polarized barium titanate nanoparticles with high mechano-electrical conversion performance are developed, which can generate pulsed open-circuit voltage under low-intensity pulsed ultrasound. Wireless electrical stimulation significantly inhibits endothelial cell migration and differentiation in vitro. In vivo experiments show that wireless electrical stimulation normalizes tumor vasculature by optimizing vascular structure, enhancing blood perfusion, reducing vascular leakage, and restoring local oxygenation.
Pathological angiogenesis frequently occurs in tumor tissue, limiting the efficiency of chemotherapeutic drug delivery and accelerating tumor progression. However, traditional vascular normalization strategies are not fully effective and limited by the development of resistance. Herein, inspired by the intervention of endogenous bioelectricity in vessel formation, we propose a wireless electrical stimulation therapeutic strategy, capable of breaking bioelectric homeostasis within cells, to achieve tumor vascular normalization. Polarized barium titanate nanoparticles with high mechano-electrical conversion performance were developed, which could generate pulsed open-circuit voltage under low-intensity pulsed ultrasound. We demonstrated that wireless electrical stimulation significantly inhibited endothelial cell migration and differentiation in vitro. Interestingly, we found that the angiogenesis-related eNOS/NO pathway was inhibited, which could be attributed to the destruction of the intracellular calcium ion gradient by wireless electrical stimulation. In vivo tumor-bearing mouse model indicated that wireless electrical stimulation normalized tumor vasculature by optimizing vascular structure, enhancing blood perfusion, reducing vascular leakage, and restoring local oxygenation. Ultimately, the antitumor efficacy of combination treatment was 1.8 times that of the single chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin group. This work provides a wireless electrical stimulation strategy based on the mechano-electrical conversion performance of piezoelectric nanoparticles, which is expected to achieve safe and effective clinical adjuvant treatment of malignant tumors.

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