High-Performance Self-Cascade Pyrite Nanozymes for Apoptosis–Ferroptosis Synergistic Tumor Therapyv
Xiangqin Meng, Dandan Li, Lei Chen, Helen He, Qian Wang, Chaoyi Hong, Jiuyang He, Xingfa Gao, Yili Yang, Bing Jiang, Guohui Nie*, Xiyun Yan*, Lizeng Gao*, and Kelong Fan*
Abstract
As next-generation artificial enzymes, nanozymes have shown great promise for tumor catalytic therapy. In particular, their peroxidase-like activity has been employed to catalyze hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) to produce highly toxic hydroxyl radicals (·OH) to kill tumor cells. However, limited by the low affinity between nanozymes with H2O2 and the low level of H2O2 in the tumor microenvironment, peroxidase nanozymes usually produced insufficient ·OH to kill tumor cells for therapeutic purposes. Herein, we present a pyrite peroxidase nanozyme with ultrahigh H2O2 affinity, resulting in a 4144- and 3086-fold increase of catalytic activity compared with that of classical Fe3O4 nanozyme and natural horseradish peroxidase, respectively. We found that the pyrite nanozyme also possesses intrinsic glutathione oxidase-like activity, which catalyzes the oxidation of reduced glutathione accompanied by H2O2 generation. Thus, the dual-activity pyrite nanozyme constitutes a self-cascade platform to generate abundant ·OH and deplete reduced glutathione, which induces apoptosis as well as ferroptosis of tumor cells. Consequently, it killed apoptosis-resistant tumor cells harboring KRAS mutation by inducing ferroptosis. The pyrite nanozyme also exhibited favorable tumor-specific cytotoxicity and biodegradability to ensure its biosafety. These results indicate that the high-performance pyrite nanozyme is an effective therapeutic reagent and may aid the development of nanozyme-based tumor catalytic therapy.
最新重要论文
High-Performance Self-Cascade Pyrite Nanozymes for Apoptosis–Ferroptosis Synergistic Tumor Therapy, ACS Nano, 12 Mar 2021
ACS Nano, 12 March, 2021, DOI:https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.1c01248
High-Performance Self-Cascade Pyrite Nanozymes for Apoptosis–Ferroptosis Synergistic Tumor Therapyv
Xiangqin Meng, Dandan Li, Lei Chen, Helen He, Qian Wang, Chaoyi Hong, Jiuyang He, Xingfa Gao, Yili Yang, Bing Jiang, Guohui Nie*, Xiyun Yan*, Lizeng Gao*, and Kelong Fan*
Abstract
As next-generation artificial enzymes, nanozymes have shown great promise for tumor catalytic therapy. In particular, their peroxidase-like activity has been employed to catalyze hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) to produce highly toxic hydroxyl radicals (·OH) to kill tumor cells. However, limited by the low affinity between nanozymes with H2O2 and the low level of H2O2 in the tumor microenvironment, peroxidase nanozymes usually produced insufficient ·OH to kill tumor cells for therapeutic purposes. Herein, we present a pyrite peroxidase nanozyme with ultrahigh H2O2 affinity, resulting in a 4144- and 3086-fold increase of catalytic activity compared with that of classical Fe3O4 nanozyme and natural horseradish peroxidase, respectively. We found that the pyrite nanozyme also possesses intrinsic glutathione oxidase-like activity, which catalyzes the oxidation of reduced glutathione accompanied by H2O2 generation. Thus, the dual-activity pyrite nanozyme constitutes a self-cascade platform to generate abundant ·OH and deplete reduced glutathione, which induces apoptosis as well as ferroptosis of tumor cells. Consequently, it killed apoptosis-resistant tumor cells harboring KRAS mutation by inducing ferroptosis. The pyrite nanozyme also exhibited favorable tumor-specific cytotoxicity and biodegradability to ensure its biosafety. These results indicate that the high-performance pyrite nanozyme is an effective therapeutic reagent and may aid the development of nanozyme-based tumor catalytic therapy.
文章链接:https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.1c01248
相关报道:http://www.ibp.cas.cn/kyjz/zxdt/202103/t20210317_5975449.html