Affiliation:
1. Interdisciplinary Program in Bioengineering College of Engineering, Seoul National University Seoul Republic of Korea
2. Institute of Medical & Biological Engineering, Medical Research Center, Seoul National University Seoul Republic of Korea
3. Department of Pathology Seoul National University College of Medicine Seoul Republic of Korea
4. Department of Biomedical Engineering Seoul National University College of Medicine Seoul Republic of Korea
Abstract
AbstractChemodynamic therapy (CDT) is based on the production of cytotoxic reactive oxygen species, such as hydroxyl radicals (•OH). Thus, CDT can be advantageous when it is cancer‐specific, in terms of efficacy and safety. Therefore, we propose NH2‐MIL‐101(Fe), a Fe‐containing metal–organic framework (MOF), as a carrier of Cu (copper)‐chelating agent, d‐penicillamine (d‐pen; i.e., the NH2‐MIL‐101(Fe)/d‐pen), as well as a catalyst with Fe‐metal clusters for Fenton reaction. NH2‐MIL‐101(Fe)/d‐pen in the form of nanoparticles was efficiently taken into cancer cells and released d‐pen in a sustained manner. The released d‐pen chelated Cu that is highly expressed in cancer environments and this produces extra H2O2, which is then decomposed by Fe in NH2‐MIL‐101(Fe) to generate •OH. Therefore, the cytotoxicity of NH2‐MIL‐101(Fe)/d‐pen was observed in cancer cells, not in normal cells. We also suggest a formulation of NH2‐MIL‐101(Fe)/d‐pen combined with NH2‐MIL‐101(Fe) loaded with the chemotherapeutic drug, irinotecan (CPT‐11; NH2‐MIL‐101(Fe)/CPT‐11). When intratumorally injected into tumor‐bearing mice in vivo, this combined formulation exhibited the most prominent anticancer effects among all tested formulations, owing to the synergistic effect of CDT and chemotherapy.
Funder
Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy
Korea Institute for Advancement of Technology
Subject
Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biotechnology
Cited by
10 articles.
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