4.8 Article

Manganese-deposited iron oxide promotes tumor-responsive ferroptosis that synergizes the apoptosis of cisplatin

Journal

THERANOSTICS
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages 5418-5429

Publisher

IVYSPRING INT PUBL
DOI: 10.7150/thno.53346

Keywords

cisplatin; ferroptosis; anticancer; theranostics; manganese

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2020YFA0710700, 2017YFA0505400]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21877103, 52021002]
  3. Anhui Provincial Natural Science Foundation [1908085QB77]
  4. Special Project of Central Government for Local Science and Technology Development of Shandong Province [YDZX20203700001291]
  5. Users with Excellence Program of Hefei Science Center CAS [2020HSC-UE016]

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The study introduced a Pt-FMO nanoplatform to trigger the generation of reactive oxygen species for enhancing ferroptosis. In vivo results showed that Pt-FMO exhibited similar treatment effect as cisplatin but with lower systemic toxicity, and also effective tumor imaging enhancement. The Pt-FMO system holds potential for inducing tumor cell death through a combination of ferroptosis and apoptosis.
Background: Ferroptosis is a form of iron-dependent programmed cell death that differs from apoptosis with regards to both mechanism and cell morphology. Therefore, ferroptotic-based cancer therapy has shown significant potential to overcome the weaknesses of conventional therapeutics mediated by apoptosis pathways. Effective ferroptosis can be induced by the intracellular Fenton reaction that is dependent on the adequate supply of iron ions and H2O2 in cells. However, these are often insufficient due to intrinsic cellular regulation. Methods: In this study, we designed a cisplatin prodrug-loaded manganese-deposited iron oxide nanoplatform (Pt-FMO) to trigger intracellular cascade reactions that lead to generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) to enhance ferroptotic effect. The Pt-FMO causes the tumor microenvironment responsive to release manganese, iron ions and Pt-drugs. As manganese is an element that is able to catalyze the Fenton reaction more effectively than iron, coupled with the Pt-drugs that can promote generation of H2O2 in cells, the Pt-FMO is expected to significantly strengthen catalysis of the Fenton reaction, which favors the ferroptotic effect. Moreover, the Pt-drugs will eventually function as cisplatin. Thus, Pt-FMO is an ideal candidate for tumor ferroptotic combined with apoptotic treatment. Results: In vivo results demonstrated that, at a dosage of only 8.89% Pt content, Pt-FMO is able to achieve a similar treatment effect as cisplatin. Hence, Pt-FMO exhibited significantly lower systemic toxicity compared to cisplatin. Additionally, Pt-FMO exhibits effective T-2-weighted MRI enhancement for tumor imaging. Conclusion: The Pt-FMO nanoplatform is designed to introduce mutual beneficial cascade reactions for promoting ferroptosis and apoptosis in combination with tumor MRI. The Pt-FMO system, which causes ferroptosis combined with apoptosis, can efficiently induce tumor cell death.

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