4.8 Review

Engineering nanomedicine for glutathione depletion-augmented cancer therapy

Journal

CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS
Volume 50, Issue 10, Pages 6013-6041

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0cs00718h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFA0211200, 2020YFA0710700, 2018YFA0208900]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [31972927, 31700867]
  3. Scientific Research Foundation of Huazhong University of Science and Technology [3004170130]
  4. Program for HUST Academic Frontier Youth Team [2018QYTD01]
  5. HCP Program for HUST

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The combination of nanomedicine with GSH scavenging agents and therapeutic drugs has attracted significant interest in enhancing cancer treatment outcomes. Despite unsatisfactory results, this approach has shown promising results in a large number of rodent tumor models.
Glutathione (GSH), the main redox buffer, has long been recognized as a pivotal modulator of tumor initiation, progression and metastasis. It is also implicated in the resistance of platinum-based chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Therefore, depleting intracellular GSH was considered a potent solution to combating cancer. However, reducing GSH within cancer cells alone always failed to yield desirable therapeutic effects. In this regard, the convergence of GSH-scavenging agents with therapeutic drugs has thus been pursued in clinical practice. Unfortunately, the therapeutic outcomes are still unsatisfactory due to untargeted drug delivery. Advanced nanomedicine of synergistic GSH depletion and cancer treatment has attracted tremendous interest because they promise to deliver superior therapeutic benefits while alleviating life-threatening side effects. In the past five years, the authors and others have demonstrated that numerous nanomedicines, by simultaneously delivering GSH-depleting agents and therapeutic components, boost not only traditional chemotherapy and radiotherapy but also multifarious emerging treatment modalities, including photodynamic therapy, sonodynamic therapy, chemodynamic therapy, ferroptosis, and immunotherapy, to name a few, and achieved decent treatment outcomes in a large number of rodent tumor models. In this review, we summarize the most recent progress in engineering nanomedicine for GSH depletion-enhanced cancer therapies. Biosynthesis of GSH and various types of GSH-consuming strategies will be briefly introduced. The challenges and perspectives of leveraging nanomedicine for GSH consumption-augmented cancer therapies will be discussed at the end.

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