1. Academic Validation
  2. A mitochondria-targeting ROS-activated nanoprodrug for self-augmented antitumor oxidation therapy

A mitochondria-targeting ROS-activated nanoprodrug for self-augmented antitumor oxidation therapy

  • J Control Release. 2023 Jul;359:415-427. doi: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2023.06.004.
Zishan Zeng 1 Yong Luo 1 Xiaoyu Xu 1 Ting Shan 1 Meixu Chen 1 Zeqian Huang 1 Yanjuan Huang 1 Chunshun Zhao 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, 510006, PR China.
  • 2 School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, 510006, PR China. Electronic address: [email protected].
Abstract

Mitochondrion is an ideal target for amplifying ROS attack in antitumor treatment. Benefiting from distinctive properties of mitochondria, the precise delivery of ROS generator to mitochondria could maximumly utilize ROS for oxidation therapy. Herein, we prepared an innovative ROS-activatable nanoprodrug (HTCF) which dually targets tumor cells and mitochondria for antitumor therapy. Cinnamaldehyde (CA) was conjugated to ferrocene (Fc) and triphenylphosphine by thioacetal linker, to synthesize mitochondria-targeting ROS-activated prodrug (TPP-CA-Fc), which subsequently self-assembled into nanoprodrug via host-guest interactions between TPP-CA-Fc and cyclodextrin-decorated hyaluronic acid conjugate. Under mitochondrial high ROS condition, especially in tumor cells, HTCF selectively initiate in-situ Fenton reaction to catalyze H2O2 into highly cytotoxic •OH, ensuring maximum generation and utilization of •OH for precision CDT. Meanwhile, the mitochondrial high ROS trigger thioacetal bond cleavage and CA release. The released CA stimulate mitochondrial oxidative stress aggravation and H2O2 regeneration, which in turn react with Fc for more •OH generation, forming self-amplifying positive feedback cycle of CA release and ROS burst. With self-augmented Fenton reaction and mitochondria-specific destruction, HTCF ultimately induce intracellular ROS burst and severe mitochondrial dysfunction for amplified ROS-mediated antitumor therapy. Such an ingenious organelles-specialized nanomedicine exhibited prominent antitumor effect both in vitro and in vivo, revealing underlying perspectives to amplify tumor-specific oxidation therapy.

Keywords

Mitochondria targeting; Oxidation therapy; ROS-activated; Reactive oxygen species; Self-augmented.

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