TY - JOUR
T1 - Ultrasound-Activated, Tumor-Specific in Situ Synthesis of a Chemotherapeutic Agent Using ZIF-8 Nanoreactors for Precision Cancer Therapy
AU - Siboro, Putry Yosefa
AU - Nguyen, Van Khanh Thi
AU - Miao, Yang Bao
AU - Sharma, Amit Kumar
AU - Mi, Fwu Long
AU - Chen, Hsin Lung
AU - Chen, Kuan Hung
AU - Yu, Yu Tzu
AU - Chang, Yen
AU - Sung, Hsing Wen
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by grants from the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST 110-2639-E-007-001-ASP and 110-2634-F-007-023) and the Ministry of Education (MOE 110QR001I5) of Taiwan (ROC).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/8/23
Y1 - 2022/8/23
N2 - The in situ transformation of low-toxicity precursors into a chemotherapeutic agent at a tumor site to enhance the efficacy of its treatment has long been an elusive goal. In this work, a zinc-based zeolitic imidazolate framework that incorporates pharmaceutically acceptable precursors is prepared as a nanoreactor (NR) system for the localized synthesis of an antitumor drug. The as-prepared NRs are administered intratumorally in a tumor-bearing mouse model and then irradiated with ultrasound (US) to activate the chemical synthesis. The US promotes the penetration of the administered NRs into the tumor tissue to cover the lesion entirely, although some NRs leak into the surrounding normal tissue. Nevertheless, only the tumor tissue, where the H2O2concentration is high, is adequately exposed to the as-synthesized antitumor drug, which markedly impedes development of the tumor. No significant chemical synthesis is detected in the surrounding normal tissue, where the local H2O2concentration is negligible and the US irradiation is not directly applied. The as-proposed tumor-specific in situ synthesis of therapeutic molecules induces hardly any significant in vivo toxicity and, thus, is potentially a potent biocompatible approach to precision chemotherapy.
AB - The in situ transformation of low-toxicity precursors into a chemotherapeutic agent at a tumor site to enhance the efficacy of its treatment has long been an elusive goal. In this work, a zinc-based zeolitic imidazolate framework that incorporates pharmaceutically acceptable precursors is prepared as a nanoreactor (NR) system for the localized synthesis of an antitumor drug. The as-prepared NRs are administered intratumorally in a tumor-bearing mouse model and then irradiated with ultrasound (US) to activate the chemical synthesis. The US promotes the penetration of the administered NRs into the tumor tissue to cover the lesion entirely, although some NRs leak into the surrounding normal tissue. Nevertheless, only the tumor tissue, where the H2O2concentration is high, is adequately exposed to the as-synthesized antitumor drug, which markedly impedes development of the tumor. No significant chemical synthesis is detected in the surrounding normal tissue, where the local H2O2concentration is negligible and the US irradiation is not directly applied. The as-proposed tumor-specific in situ synthesis of therapeutic molecules induces hardly any significant in vivo toxicity and, thus, is potentially a potent biocompatible approach to precision chemotherapy.
KW - in situ synthesis
KW - precision chemotherapy
KW - pyrimidine-based derivative
KW - sonotherapy
KW - therapeutic nanoreactor
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U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.2c03587
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.2c03587
M3 - Article
C2 - 35920682
AN - SCOPUS:85136025858
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 16
SP - 12403
EP - 12414
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 8
ER -