Advanced Science (Aug 2023)

Sequential Ubiquitination and Phosphorylation Epigenetics Reshaping by MG132‐Loaded Fe‐MOF Disarms Treatment Resistance to Repulse Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

  • Zhaoting Bu,
  • Jianjun Yang,
  • Yan Zhang,
  • Tao Luo,
  • Chao Fang,
  • Xiayi Liang,
  • Qiuxia Peng,
  • Duo Wang,
  • Ningjing Lin,
  • Kun Zhang,
  • Weizhong Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202301638
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 23
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Abnormal epigenetic regulation is identified to correlate with cancer progression and renders tumor refractory and resistant to reactive oxygen species (ROS)‐based anti‐tumor actions. To address it, a sequential ubiquitination and phosphorylation epigenetics modulation strategy is developed and exemplified by the well‐established Fe‐metal‐organic framework (Fe‐MOF)‐based chemodynamic therapy (CDT) nanoplatforms that load the 26S proteasome inhibitor (i.e., MG132). The encapsulated MG132 can blockade 26S proteasome, terminate ubiquitination, and further inhibit transcription factor phosphorylation (e.g., NF‐κB p65), which can boost pro‐apoptotic or misfolded protein accumulations, disrupt tumor homeostasis, and down‐regulate driving genes expression of metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). Contributed by them, Fe‐MOF‐unlocked CDT is magnified to considerably elevate ROS content for repulsing mCRC, especially after combining with macrophage membrane coating‐enabled tropism accumulation. Systematic experiments reveal the mechanism and signaling pathway of such a sequential ubiquitination and phosphorylation epigenetics modulation and explain how it could blockade ubiquitination and phosphorylation to liberate the therapy resistance to ROS and activate NF‐κB‐related acute immune responses. This unprecedented sequential epigenetics modulation lays a solid foundation to magnify oxidative stress and can serve as a general method to enhance other ROS‐based anti‐tumor methods.

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