Rational design of potent antioxidative agent with high biocompatibility is urgently needed to treat ischemic reperfusion-induced ROS-mediated cerebrovascular and neural injury during ischemia strokes. Here, we demonstrate an in situ synthetic strategy of bioactive zeolitic imidazolate framework-8–capped ceria nanoparticles (CeO2@ZIF-8 NPs) to achieve enhanced catalytic and antioxidative activities and improved stroke therapeutic efficacy. This nanosystem exhibits prolonged blood circulation time, reduced clearance rate, improved BBB penetration ability, and enhanced brain accumulation, where it effectively inhibits the lipid peroxidation in brain tissues in middle cerebral artery occlusion mice and reduces the oxidative damage and apoptosis of neurons in brain tissue. CeO2@ZIF-8 also suppresses inflammation- and immune response–induced injury by suppressing the activation of astrocytes and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, thus achieving satisfactory prevention and treatment in neuroprotective therapy. This study also sheds light on the neuroprotective action mechanisms of ZIF-8–capped nanomedicine against reperfusion-induced injury in ischemic stroke.
Chemical drug design based on the biochemical characteristics of cancer cells has become an important strategy for discovery of targeted therapies for personalized cancer medicine. Herein, cancer targeting RGD peptide has been covalently conjugated to selenadiazole derivative (RGD-SeD) to improve its cancer selectivity. The RGD decoration significantly enhances the anticancer efficacy of RGD-SeD in αVβ3 integrin-overexpressing HepG2 liver cancer cells but not in normal liver cells. Cellular uptake assay and fluorescent imaging confirmed the selectivity of RGD-SeD to integrin-overexpressing cancer cells. RGD-SeD strongly sensitizes HepG2 cells to clinically used X-ray radiotherapy through ROS overproduction, which triggers DNA damage-mediated apoptosis and G2/M cell cycle arrest. This X-ray-responsive DNA damage activates p53 signaling pathways by phosphorylation of ATM/ATR and γ-H2A.X. Furthermore, in a HepG2 nude mice xenograft model, the combined treatment of RGD-SeD and X-ray demonstrates potent in vivo antitumor efficacy via induction of apoptotic cell death but shows no toxicity on the functions of major organs. In summary, this study provides a strategy to design a selenium-based cancer targeting radiosensitizer for precise cancer therapy.
Selenadiazole derivatives (SeDs) have been found to show promise in chemo-/radiotherapy applications by activating various downstream signaling pathways. However, the functional role of SeDs on angiogenesis, which is pivotal for tumor progression and metastasis, has not yet been elucidated. In the present study, we have examined the antiangiogenic activities of SeDs and elucidated their underlying mechanisms. The results showed that the as-synthesized SeDs not only enhanced their anticancer activities against several human cancer cells but also showed more potent inhibition on human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). The in vitro results suggested that SeDs, especially 1 a, dose-dependently inhibited the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-induced cell migration, invasion, and capillary-like structure formation of HUVECs. Compound 1 a also significantly suppressed VEGF-induced angiogenesis in a Matrigel plug assay as part of a C57/BL6 mice assay by means of down regulation of VEGF. Furthermore, we found that 1 a significantly inhibited MCF-7 human breast tumor growth in nude mice without severe systematic cytotoxicity. Compound 1 a was more effective in inhibiting cell proliferation and induced a much more pronounced apoptosis effect in endothelial cells than MCF-7 cells, which implies that endothelial cells might be the primary target of 1 a. Further mechanistic studies on tumor growth inhibition effects and neovessel formation suppression demonstrated that 1 a inhibited cell viability of MCF-7 and HUVECs by induction of cell apoptosis, accompanied by poly(adenosine diphosphate ribose)polymerase (PARP) cleavage and caspase activation. Additionally, the 1 a-induced antiangiogenesis effect was achieved by abolishing the VEGF-VEGFR2-ERK/AKT (ERK=extracellular signal-regulated kinases; AKT=protein kinease B) signal axis and enhanced the apoptosis effect by triggering reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated DNA damage. Taken together, these results clearly demonstrate the antiangiogenic potency of SeDs and the underlying molecular mechanisms.
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