Bio-orthogonal bond-cleavage reactions have been used
in cancer
therapy for improving the biological specificity of prodrug activation,
but the spatiotemporal consistency of reactants is still a huge challenge.
Although, in most cases, the cleavage catalysts and caged prodrugs
are administrated separately, it is difficult to avoid the reactions
in advance before they meet at the tumor site. Herein, we design and
construct novel coordinative nanoparticles, integrating two prodrugs A and B as ligands and ferric ions as coordinative
centers. After nanoparticles accumulated in tumor through passive
targeting, inert Pt(IV) prodrug A is specifically and
spontaneously reduced into active Pt(II) cisplatin, which acts as
the cleavage catalyst to subsequently initiate the in situ bio-orthogonal depropargylation of B, that is, O
2-propargyl nitric oxide (NO) donor. The unique
structure of coordinative nanoparticles ensures the spatiotemporal
consistency of reactants (prodrugs A and B) and products (cytotoxic cisplatin and tumoricidal NO) for the bio-orthogonal
bond-cleavage reaction, which leads to an improved synergistic therapeutic
activity for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). This new concept
of bio-orthogonal dual-prodrug coordinative nanoparticles may inspire
further applications in bio-orthogonal chemistry and drug delivery
for combination chemotherapy.
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