4.8 Article

Camouflaged Nanoreactors Mediated Radiotherapy-Adjuvant Chemodynamic Synergistic Therapy

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 17, Issue 23, Pages 24170-24186

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.3c09424

Keywords

Chemodynamic therapy; Radiation therapy; Electronsupplementation; Ferroptosis; Immunity

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This study designs a camouflaged nano-reactor that combines chemodynamic therapy and radiotherapy, effectively inhibiting malignant tumors. Experimental results demonstrate that the nano-reactor damages tumor cells through multiple mechanisms and addresses the limitations of chemodynamic therapy and radiotherapy.
Chemodynamic therapy based on the Fenton-like catalysis ability of Fe3O4 has the advantages of no involvement of chemical drugs and minimal adverse effects as well as the limitation of depletable efficacy. Radiotherapy based on high-energy radiation offers the convenience of treatment and cost-effectiveness but lacks precision and cellular adaptation of tumor cells. Approaching such dilemmas from a nanoscale materials perspective, we aim to bridge the weaknesses of both treatment methods by combining the principles of two therapeutics reciprocally. We have designed a camouflaged Fe3O4@HfO2 composite nanoreactor (FHCM), which combines a chemodynamic therapeutic agent Fe3O4 and a radiosensitizer HfO2 that both has passed clinical trials and was inspired by a cell membrane biomimetic technique. FHCM is employed as conceived radiotherapy-adjuvant chemodynamic synergistic therapy of malignant tumors, which has undergone dual scrutiny from both the physical and biological aspects. Experimental results obtained at different levels, including theory, material characterizations, and in vitro and in vivo verifications, suggest that FHCM effectively impaired tumor cells through physical and molecular biological mechanisms involving a HfO2-Fe3O4 photoelectron-electron transfer chain and DNA damage-ferroptosis-immunity chain. It is worth noting that compared to single therapies such as only chemodynamic therapy or radiotherapy, FHCM-mediated radiotherapy-adjuvant chemodynamic synergistic therapy exhibits stronger tumor inhibition efficacy. It significantly addresses the inherent limitations of chemodynamic therapy and radiotherapy and underscores the feasibility and importance of using existing clinical weapons, such as radiotherapy, as auxiliary strategies to overcome certain flaws of emerging antitumor therapeutics like chemodynamic therapy.

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