Although great progress has been made in artificial enzyme engineering, their catalytic performance is far from satisfactory as alternatives of natural enzymes. Here, we report a novel and efficient strategy to access high-performance nanozymes via direct atomization of platinum nanoparticles (Pt NPs) into single atoms by reversing the thermal sintering process. Atomization of Pt NPs into single atoms makes metal catalytic sites fully exposed and results in engineerable structural and electronic properties, thereby leading to dramatically enhanced enzymatic performance. As expected, the as-prepared thermally stable Pt single-atom nanozyme (PtTS-SAzyme) exhibited remarkable peroxidase-like catalytic activity and kinetics, far exceeding the Pt nanoparticle nanozyme. The following density functional theory calculations revealed that the engineered P and S atoms not only promote the atomization process from Pt NPs into PtTS-SAzyme but also endow single-atom Pt catalytic sites with a unique electronic structure owing to the electron donation of P atoms, as well as the electron acceptance of N and S atoms, which simultaneously contribute to the substantial enhancement of the enzyme-like catalytic performance of PtTS-SAzyme. This work demonstrates that thermal atomization of the metal nanoparticle-based nanozymes into single-atom nanozymes is an effective strategy for engineering high-performance nanozymes, which opens up a new way to rationally design and optimize artificial enzymes to mimic natural enzymes.
Metrics & MoreArticle Recommendations CONSPECTUS: Ferritins are spherical iron storage proteins within cells that are composed of a combination of 24 subunits of two types, heavy-chain ferritin (HFn) and light-chain ferritin (LFn). They autoassemble naturally into a spherical hollow nanocage with an outer diameter of 12 nm and an interior cavity that is 8 nm in diameter. In recent years, with the constantly emerging safety issues and the concerns about unfavorable uniformity and indefinite in vivo behavior of traditional nanomedicines, the characteristics of native ferritin nanocages, such as the unique nanocage structure, excellent safety profile, and definite in vivo behavior, make ferritin-based formulations uniquely attractive for nanomedicine development. To date, a variety of cargo molecules, including therapeutic drugs (e.g., cisplatin, carboplatin, paclitaxel, curcumin, atropine, quercetin, gefitinib, daunomycin, epirubicin, doxorubicin, etc.), imaging agents (e.g., fluorescence dyes, radioisotopes, and MRI contrast agents), nucleic acids (e.g., siRNA and miRNA), and metal nanoparticles (e.g., Fe 3 O 4 , CeO 2 , AuPd, CuS, CoPt, FeCo, Ag, etc.) have been loaded into the interior cavity of ferritin nanocages for a broad range of biomedical applications from in vitro biosensing to targeted delivery of cargo molecules in living systems with the aid of modified targeting ligands either genetically or chemically. We reported that human HFn could selectively deliver a large amount of cargo into tumors in vivo via transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1)-mediated tumor-cell-specific targeting followed by rapid internalization. By the use of the intrinsic tumor-targeting property and unique nanocage structure of human HFn, a broad variety of cargo-loaded HFn formulations have been developed for biological analysis, imaging diagnosis, and medicine development. In view of the intrinsic tumor-targeting property, unique nanocage structure, lack of immunogenicity, and definite in vivo behavior, human HFn holds promise to promote therapeutic drugs, diagnostic imaging agents, and targeting moieties into multifunctional nanomedicines.Since the report of the intrinsic tumor-targeting property of human HFn, we have extensively explored human HFn as an ideal nanocarrier for tumor-targeted delivery of anticancer drugs, MRI contrast agents, inorganic nanoparticles, and radioisotopes. In particular, by the use of genetic tools, we also have genetically engineered human HFn nanocages to recognize a broader range of disease biomarkers. In this Account, we systematically review human ferritins from characterizing their tumor-binding property and understanding their mechanism and kinetics for cargo loading to exploring their biomedical applications. We finally discuss the prospect of ferritin-based formulations to become next-generation nanomedicines. We expect that ferritin formulations with unique physicochemical characteristics and intrinsic tumor-targeting property will attract broad interest in fundamental drug research and offer new op...
Nanozymes are nanomaterials with intrinsic enzyme-like properties. They can specifically catalyze substrates of natural enzymes under physiological condition with similar catalytic mechanism and kinetics. Compared to natural enzymes, nanozymes exhibit the unique advantages including high catalytic activity, low cost, high stability, easy mass production, and tunable activity. In addition, as a new type of artificial enzymes, nanozymes not only have the enzyme-like catalytic activity, but also exhibit the unique physicochemical properties of nanomaterials, such as photothermal properties, superparamagnetism, and fluorescence, etc. By combining the unique physicochemical properties and enzyme-like catalytic activities, nanozymes have been widely developed for in vitro detection and in vivo disease monitoring and treatment. Here we mainly summarized the applications of nanozymes for disease imaging and detection to explore their potential application in disease diagnosis and precision medicine.
Nanomaterials with intrinsic enzyme-like properties, termed nanozymes, have attracted significant interest, although limited information is available on their biological characteristics in cells or in vivo. Here, it is shown that nanomaterials with peroxidase-like activity trigger a novel form of cell death through an ATP-citrate lyase (ACLY)-dependent rat sarcoma viral oncogene (RAS) signaling mechanism. The peroxidase nanozyme-induced cell lethality, which is termed as nanoptosis, is morphologically and biochemically distinct from the currently well-defined apoptosis, necrosis, autophagy, pyroptosis, and ferroptosis. It is revealed that nanoptosis is typically characterized by the massive accumulation of cellular vesicles, swelling mitochondria, and distinct chromatin condensation and margination. Using RNA sequencing and protein quantitative mass spectrometry, an ACLY-dependent RAS signaling pathway is identified that mainly mediates this nanozyme lethality process, and it is observed that RAS-knockout cells are highly resistant to nanoptosis. Finally, it is demonstrated that this newly discovered nanozyme lethality can be used as an effective therapeutic strategy for inhibiting tumor growth in vivo.
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