Fenton-like reactions driven by manganese-based nanostructures have been widely applied in cancer treatment owing to the intrinsic physiochemical properties of these nanostructures and their improved sensitivity to the tumor microenvironment. In this work, Zn x Mn 1−x S@polydopamine composites incorporating alloyed Zn x Mn 1−x S and polydopamine (PDA) were constructed, in which the Fenton-like reactions driven by Mn ions can be tuned by a controllable release of Mn ions in vitro and in vivo. As a result, the Zn x Mn 1−x S@PDA exhibited good biocompatibility with normal cells but was specifically toxic to cancer cells. In addition, the shell thickness of PDA was carefully investigated to obtain excellent specific toxicity to cancer cells and promote synergistic chemodynamic and photothermal therapies. Overall, this work highlights an alternative strategy for fabricating high-performance, multifunctional composite nanostructures for a combined cancer treatment.
In this work, a fluoroquinolone antibiotic drug (sparfloxacin (SP)) was selected as a chemotherapy drug and photosensitizer for combined therapy. A facile chemical process was developed to incorporate SP and upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) into the thermally sensitive amphiphilic polymer polyethylene glycol-poly(2-hexoxy-2-oxo-1,3,2-dioxaphospholane). In vitro and in vivo experiments showed that 60% of the SP molecules can be released from the micelles of thermal-sensitive polymers using a 1 W cm −2 980 nm laser, and this successfully inhibits cell migration and metastasis by inhibiting type II topoisomerases in nuclei. Additionally, intracellular metal ions were chelated by SP to induce cancer cell apoptosis by decreasing the activity of superoxide dismutase and catalase. In particular, the fluoroquinolone molecules produced singlet oxygen ( 1 O 2 ) to kill cancer cells, and this was triggered by UCNPs when irradiation was performed with a 980 nm laser. Overall, SP retained a weak chemotherapeutic effect, achieved enhanced photosensitizer-like effects, and was able to repurpose old drugs to elevate the therapeutic efficacy against cancer, increase the specificity for suppressing tumor migration and proliferation, and enhance apoptosis.
Background
Psoriasis is a chronic relapsing immunological skin disease characterized by multiple cross-talk inflammatory circuits which are relevantly associated with abnormal cross-reactivity between immune cells and keratinocytes (KCs). It may be inadequate to eradicate complicated pathogenesis only via single-mode therapy. To provide optimal combinatory therapeutics, a nanocomposite-based hydrogel was constructed by loading methotrexate (MTX) into ZnO/Ag to realize combined multiple target therapy of psoriasis.
Results
In this composite hydrogel, ZnO hybrid mesoporous microspheres were utilized both as drug carriers and reactive oxygen species (ROS)-scavenging nanoparticles. A proper amount of Ag nanoparticle-anchored ZnO nanoparticles (ZnO/Ag) was functionalized with inherent immunoregulatory property. The experiments showed that ZnO/Ag nanoparticles could exhibit a self-therapeutic effect that was attributed to reducing innate cytokine profiles by inactivating p65 in proinflammatory macrophages and abrogating secretion of adaptive cytokines in KCs by downregulating ROS-mediated STAT3-cyclin D1 signaling. A preferable antipsoriatic efficacy was achieved via topical administration of this hydrogel on the imiquimod (IMQ)-induced psoriasis mice model, demonstrating the superior transdermal delivery and combined enhancement of therapeutic efficacy caused by intrinsic nanoparticles and extrinsic MTX.
Conclusion
This composite hydrogel could serve as a multifunctional, nonirritating, noninvasive and effective transcutaneous nanoagent against psoriasis.
Graphical Abstract
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