4.8 Article

Smart Nanoreactors for pH-Responsive Tumor Homing, Mitochondria-Targeting, and Enhanced Photodynamic-Immunotherapy of Cancer

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 2475-2484

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b00040

Keywords

Photodynamic therapy; nanoreactors; tumor hypoxia; mitochondria targeting; check-point-blockade therapy

Funding

  1. National Research Programs from Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of China [2016YFA0201200]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51525203, 51761145041, 31530024]
  3. Collaborative Innovation Center of Suzhou Nano Science and Technology
  4. Priority Academic Program Development (PAPD) of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions

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Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is an oxygen-dependent light-triggered noninvasive therapeutic method showing many promising aspects in cancer treatment. For effective PDT, nanoscale carriers are often needed to realize tumor-targeted delivery of photosensitizers, which ideally should further target specific cell organelles that are most vulnerable to reactive oxygen species (ROS). Second, as oxygen is critical for PDT-induced cancer destruction, overcoming hypoxia existing in the majority of solid tumors is important for optimizing PDT efficacy. Furthermore, as PDT is a localized treatment method, achieving systemic antitumor therapeutic outcomes with PDT would have tremendous clinical values. Aiming at addressing the above challenges, we design a unique type of enzyme-encapsulated, photosensitizer-loaded hollow silica nanoparticles with rationally designed surface engineering as smart nanoreactors. Such nanoparticles with pH responsive surface coating show enhanced retention responding to the acidic tumor microenvironment and are able to further target mitochondria, the cellular organelle most sensitive to ROS. Meanwhile, decomposition of tumor endogenous H2O2 triggered by those nanoreactors would lead to greatly relieved tumor hypoxia, further favoring in vivo PDT. Moreover, by combining our nanoparticle-based PDT with check-point-blockade therapy, systemic antitumor immune responses could be achieved to kill nonirradiated tumors 1-2 cm away, promising for metastasis inhibition.

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