A WO3−x-based nanotheranostic has been successfully fabricated for photoacoustic imaging-guided synergistic tumor targeting therapy in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) biological window.
Recently, inorganic nanomaterials have received considerable attention for use in biomedical applications owing to their unique physicochemical properties based on their shapes, sizes, and surface characteristics. Photodynamic therapy (PDT), sonodynamic therapy (SDT), and chemical dynamic therapy (CDT), which are cancer therapeutics mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS), have the potential to significantly enhance the therapeutic precision and efficacy for cancer. To facilitate cancer therapeutics, numerous inorganic nanomaterials have been developed to generate ROS. This mini review provides an overview of the generation mechanisms of ROS by representative inorganic nanomaterials for cancer therapeutics, including the structures of engineered inorganic nanomaterials, ROS production conditions, ROS types, and the applications of the inorganic nanomaterials in cancer PDT, SDT, and CDT.
Second near-infrared (NIR-II) window responsive phototheranostic agents have a precise spatiotemporal potential for the diagnosis and treatment of cancer. In this study, a full-spectrum responsive ZrO2-based phototheranostic agent was found...
Chemodynamic immunotherapy that utilizes catalysts to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) for killing tumor cells and arousing antitumor immunity has received considerable attention. However, it is still restricted by low ROS production efficiency and insufficient immune activation, due to intricate redox homeostasis in the tumor microenvironment (TME). Herein, a metalloprotein‐like hybrid nanozyme (FeS@GOx) is designed by in situ growth of nanozyme (ferrous sulfide, FeS) in a natural enzyme (glucose oxidase, GOx) to amplify ROS cascade for boosting chemodynamic immunotherapy. In FeS@GOx, GOx allows the conversion of endogenous glucose to gluconic acid and hydrogen peroxide, which provides favorable increasing hydrogen peroxide for subsequent Fenton reaction of FeS nanozymes, thus reinforcing ROS production. Notably, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) release is activated by the gluconic acid generation‐related pH decrease, which can suppress the activity of endogenous thioredoxin reductase and catalase to further inhibit ROS elimination. Thus, FeS@GOx can sustainably amplify ROS accumulation and perturb intracellular redox homeostasis to improve chemodynamic therapy and trigger robust immunogenic cell death for effective immunotherapy combined with immune checkpoint blockade. This work proposes a feasible H2S amplified ROS cascade strategy employing a bioinspired hybrid nanozyme, providing a novel pathway to multi‐enzyme‐mediated TME modulation for precise and efficient chemodynamic immunotherapy.
Phototheranostic offers a regional-focused
tumor treatment upon
photoirradiation. However, it is difficult to completely eradicate
solid tumors using a conventional phototheranostic owing to the residual
tumor cells outside the laser irradiation range. Herein, we fabricated
a metallopolysaccharide-based smart nanotheranostic (Fe–
d
HA) via a nanoassembly-driven method, in
which Fe3+ ions were coordinated to dopamine-modified biopolysaccharide
hyaluronic acid (
d
HA). Taking advantage
of the structural backbone and intrinsic dual-information-related
functions of HA as well as the bi-functional Fe(III)-coordination
centers, Fe–
d
HA can efficiently
target tumor cells for phototheranostic. Additionally, it can be activated
by endogenous overexpressed hyaluronidase to achieve sequential ferroptosis
in tumor cells. The precise imaging and effective tumor inhibition
using this metallopolysaccharide-based nanotheranostic were significantly
demonstrated in vivo and in vitro. Thus, this rationally designed
Fe–
d
HA provided a simple metallopolysaccharide
strategy to develop an “all-in-one” smart nanotheranostic
to synergize different therapeutic modalities for improving cancer
therapy.
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