Asian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences (Nov 2021)

Iron-doxorubicin prodrug loaded liposome nanogenerator programs multimodal ferroptosis for efficient cancer therapy

  • Yinxian Yang,
  • Shiyi Zuo,
  • Linxiao Li,
  • Xiao Kuang,
  • Jinbo Li,
  • Bingjun Sun,
  • Shujun Wang,
  • Zhonggui He,
  • Jin Sun

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
pp. 784 – 793

Abstract

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Ferroptosis is a new mode of cell death, which can be induced by Fenton reaction-mediated lipid peroxidation. However, the insufficient H2O2 and high GSH in tumor cells restrict the efficiency of Fenton reaction-dependent ferroptosis. Herein, a self-supplying lipid peroxide nanoreactor was developed to co-delivery of doxorubicin (DOX), iron and unsaturated lipid for efficient ferroptosis. By leveraging the coordination effect between DOX and Fe3+, trisulfide bond-bridged DOX dimeric prodrug was actively loaded into the core of the unsaturated lipids-rich liposome via iron ion gradient method. First, Fe3+could react with the overexpressed GSH in tumor cells, inducing the GSH depletion and Fe2+generation. Second, the cleavage of trisulfide bond could also consume GSH, and the released DOX induces the generation of H2O2, which would react with the generated Fe2+in step one to induce efficient Fenton reaction-dependent ferroptosis. Third, the formed Fe3+/Fe2+ couple could directly catalyze peroxidation of unsaturated lipids to boost Fenton reaction-independent ferroptosis. This iron-prodrug liposome nanoreactor precisely programs multimodal ferroptosis by integrating GSH depletion, ROS generation and lipid peroxidation, providing new sights for efficient cancer therapy.

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