International Journal of Nanomedicine (Jul 2024)
Designing Mesoporous Prussian Blue@zinc Phosphate Nanoparticles with Hierarchical Pores for Varisized Guest Delivery and Photothermally-Augmented Chemo-Starvation Therapy
Abstract
Yuan Yuan,1,* Mingyi Hou,2,* Xiaoning Song,1 Xintao Yao,1 Xuerui Wang,1 Xiangjun Chen,2 Shengnan Li1 1School of Chemical Engineering and Technology, Hebei University of Technology, Tianjin, 300401, People’s Republic of China; 2School of Pharmacy, Shandong New Drug Loading & Release Technology and Preparation Engineering Laboratory, Binzhou Medical University, Yantai, 264003, People’s Republic of China*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Shengnan Li; Xiaoning Song, School of Chemical Engineering and Technology, Hebei University of Technology, Xiping Road, Tianjin, 300401, People’s Republic of China, Email [email protected]; [email protected]: With the rapid development of nanotechnology, constructing a multifunctional nanoplatform that can deliver various therapeutic agents in different departments and respond to endogenous/exogenous stimuli for multimodal synergistic cancer therapy remains a major challenge to address the inherent limitations of chemotherapy.Methods: Herein, we synthesized hollow mesoporous Prussian Blue@zinc phosphate nanoparticles to load glucose oxidase (GOx) and DOX (designed as HMPB-GOx@ZnP-DOX NPs) in the non-identical pore structures of their HMPB core and ZnP shell, respectively, for photothermally augmented chemo-starvation therapy.Results: The ZnP shell coated on the HMPB core, in addition to providing space to load DOX for chemotherapy, could also serve as a gatekeeper to protect GOx from premature leakage and inactivation before reaching the tumor site because of its degradation characteristics under mild acidic conditions. Moreover, the loaded GOx can initiate starvation therapy by catalyzing glucose oxidation while causing an upgradation of acidity and H2O2 levels, which can also be used as forceful endogenous stimuli to trigger smart delivery systems for therapeutic applications. The decrease in pH can improve the pH-sensitivity of drug release, and O2 can be supplied by decomposing H2O2 through the catalase-like activity of HMPBs, which is beneficial for relieving the adverse conditions of anti-tumor activity. In addition, the inner HMPB also acts as a photothermal agent for photothermal therapy and the generated hyperthermia upon laser irradiation can serve as an external stimulus to further promote drug release and enzymatic activities of GOx, thereby enabling a synergetic photothermally enhanced chemo-starvation therapy effect. Importantly, these results indicate that HMPB-GOx@ZnP-DOX NPs can effectively inhibit tumor growth by 80.31% and exhibit no obvious systemic toxicity in mice.Conclusion: HMPB-GOx@ZnP-DOX NPs can be employed as potential theranostic agents that incorporate multiple therapeutic modes to efficiently inhibit tumors. Keywords: Prussian Blue, glucose oxidase, co-delivery system, photothermal therapy, chemotherapy