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1.
Arch Biochem Biophys ; 728: 109354, 2022 10 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35863477

RESUMO

Dipyridamole is currently used as a medication that inhibits blood clot formation and it is also investigated in the context of neurodegenerative and other amyloid related diseases. Here, we propose this molecule as a new diagnostic tool to follow the aggregation properties of three different amyloidogenic proteins tested (insulin, amylin and amyloid ß peptide 1-40). Results show that dipyridamole is sensitive to early stage amyloid formation undetected by thioflavin T, giving a different response for the aggregation of the three different proteins. In addition, we show that dipyridamole is also able to enhance ubiquitin chain growth, paving the way to its potential application as therapeutic agent in neurodegenerative diseases.


Assuntos
Peptídeos beta-Amiloides , Proteínas Amiloidogênicas , Amiloide , Dipiridamol , Polipeptídeo Amiloide das Ilhotas Pancreáticas
2.
Molecules ; 27(6)2022 Mar 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35335280

RESUMO

In this contribution, we report a strategy to enhance the therapeutic action of the chemotherapeutic Sorafenib (SRB) through its combination with a multifunctional ß-cyclodextrin-based polymer able to deliver nitric oxide (NO) and emit green fluorescence upon visible light excitation (PolyCDNO). The basically water-insoluble SRB is effectively encapsulated in the polymeric host (1 mg mL-1) up to a concentration of 18 µg mL-1. The resulting host-guest supramolecular complex is able to release SRB in sink conditions and to preserve very well the photophysical and photochemical properties of the free PolyCDNO, as demonstrated by the similar values of the NO release and fluorescence emission quantum efficiencies found. The complex PolyCDNO/SRB internalizes in HEP-G2 hepatocarcinoma, MCF-7 breast cancer and ACHN kidney adenocarcinoma cells, localizing in all cases mainly at the cytoplasmic level. Biological experiments have been performed at SRB concentrations below the IC50 and with light doses producing NO at nontoxic concentrations. The results demonstrate exceptional mortality levels for PolyCDNO/SRB upon visible light irradiation in all the different cell lines tested, indicating a clear synergistic action between the chemotherapeutic drug and the NO. These findings can open up exciting avenues to potentiate the anticancer action of SRB and, in principle, to reduce its side effects through its use at low dosages when in combination with the photo-regulated release of NO.


Assuntos
Polímeros , beta-Ciclodextrinas , Celulose , Ciclodextrinas , Óxido Nítrico/metabolismo , Polímeros/química , Sorafenibe/farmacologia , beta-Ciclodextrinas/química
3.
J Mater Chem B ; 12(26): 6500-6508, 2024 Jul 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38873736

RESUMO

The strict dependence of the biological effects of nitric oxide (NO) on its concentration and generation site requires this inorganic free radical to be delivered with precise spatiotemporal control. Light-activation by suitable NO photoprecursors represents an ideal approach. Developing strategies to activate NO release using long-wavelength excitation light in the therapeutic window (650-1300 nm) is challenging. In this contribution, we demonstrate that NO release by a blue-light activatable NO photodonor (NOPD) with self-fluorescence reporting can be triggered catalytically by the much more biocompatible red light exploiting a supramolecular photosensitization process. Different red-light absorbing photosensitizers (PSs) are co-entrapped with the NOPD within different biocompatible nanocarriers such as Pluronic® micelles, microemulsions and branched cyclodextrin polymers. The intra-carrier photosensitized NO release, involving the lowest, long-lived triplet state of the PS as the key intermediate and its quenching by the NOPD, is competitive with that by molecular oxygen. This allows NO to be released with good efficacy, even under aerobic conditions. Therefore, the adopted general strategy provides a valuable tool for generating NO from an already available NOPD, otherwise activatable with the poorly biocompatible blue light, without requiring any chemical modification and using sophisticated and expensive irradiation sources.


Assuntos
Materiais Biocompatíveis , Luz , Óxido Nítrico , Fármacos Fotossensibilizantes , Óxido Nítrico/química , Óxido Nítrico/metabolismo , Fármacos Fotossensibilizantes/química , Fármacos Fotossensibilizantes/farmacologia , Materiais Biocompatíveis/química , Materiais Biocompatíveis/farmacologia , Portadores de Fármacos/química , Fluorescência , Nanopartículas/química , Humanos , Tamanho da Partícula
4.
ACS Appl Polym Mater ; 5(10): 7918-7926, 2023 Oct 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37854303

RESUMO

The achievement of biocompatible platforms for multimodal therapies is one of the major challenges in the burgeoning field of nanomedicine. Here, we report on a mixed ß- and γ-cyclodextrin-based branched polymeric material (ßγCD-NOPD) covalently integrating a nitric oxide (NO) photodonor (NOPD) within its macromolecular scaffold, and its supramolecular ensemble with a singlet oxygen (1O2) photosensitizer (PS) Zn(II) phthalocyanine (ZnPc) and the chemodrug Lenvatinib (LVB). This polymer is highly water-soluble and generates NO under visible blue light stimuli with an efficiency of more than 1 order of magnitude higher than that of the single NOPD. The PS, which in an aqueous solution is aggregated and non-photoresponsive, can be entangled in the polymeric network as a photoresponsive monomeric species. In addition, the poorly water-soluble LVB can be co-encapsulated within the polymeric host, which increases the drug solubility by more than 30-fold compared to the free drug and more than 2-fold compared with a similar branched polymer containing only ßCD units. The supramolecular nanoensemble, ca. 15 nm in diameter, retains well the photochemical properties of both the NOPD and PS, which can operate in parallel under light stimuli of different energies. Irradiation with blue and red light results in the photogeneration of NO and 1O2 associated with red fluorescence emission, without inducing any photodegradation of LVB. This result is not trivial and is due to the absence of significant, mutual interactions between the NOPD, the PS and LVB both in the ground and excited states, despite these components are confined in the same host. The proposed polymeric nanoplatform may represent a potential trimodal nanomedicine for biomedical research studies, since it combines the double photodynamic action of NO and 1O2, two species that do not suffer multidrug resistance, with the therapeutic activity of a conventional chemodrug.

5.
J Photochem Photobiol B ; 245: 112756, 2023 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37454510

RESUMO

Curcumin (CUR) is a naturally occurring pigment extensively studied due to its therapeutic activity and delivered by suitable nanocarriers to overcome poor solubility in aqueous media. The significant absorption of CUR in the visible blue region has prompted its use as a potential phototherapeutic agent in treating infectious and cancer diseases, although the mechanism underlying the phototoxic effects is still not fully understood. This contribution investigates the photobehaviour of CUR within polymeric micelles, microemulsions, and zein nanoparticles, chosen as biocompatible nanocarriers, and human serum albumin as a representative biomolecule. Spectroscopic studies indicate that in all host systems, the enolic tautomeric form of CUR is converted in a significant amount of the diketo form because of the perturbation of the intramolecular hydrogen bond. This leads to intermolecular H-abstraction from the host components by the lowest excited triplet state of CUR with the formation of the corresponding ketyl radical, detected by nanosecond laser flash photolysis. This radical is oxidized by molecular oxygen, likely generating peroxyl and hydroperoxyl radical species, unless in Zein, reasonably due to the poor availability of oxygen in the closely packed structure of this nanocarrier. In contrast, no detectable formation of singlet oxygen was revealed in all the systems. Overall these results highlight the key role of the H-abstraction process over singlet oxygen sensitization as a primary photochemical pathway strictly dictated by the specific features of the microenvironment, providing new insights into the photoreactivity of CUR in biocompatible hosts that can also be useful for a better understanding of its phototoxicity mechanism.


Assuntos
Curcumina , Zeína , Humanos , Curcumina/química , Fotólise , Oxigênio Singlete , Oxigênio/química
6.
Pharmaceutics ; 15(1)2022 Dec 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36678725

RESUMO

The chemotherapeutic Lenvatinib (LVB) and a nitric oxide (NO) photodonor based on a rhodamine antenna (RD-NO) activatable by the highly compatible green light are supramolecularly assembled by a ß-cyclodextrin branched polymer (PolyCD). The poorly water-soluble LVB and RD-NO solubilize very well within the polymeric host leading to a ternary supramolecular nanoassembly with a diameter of ~55 nm. The efficiency of the NO photorelease and the typical red fluorescence of RD-NO significantly enhance within the polymer due to its active role in the photochemical and photophysical deactivation pathways. The co-presence of LVB within the same host does not affect either the nature or the efficiency of the photoinduced processes of RD-NO. Besides, irradiation of RD-NO does not lead to the decomposition of LVB, ruling out any intermolecular photoinduced process between the two guests despite sharing the same host. Ad-hoc devised Förster Resonance Energy Transfer experiments demonstrate this to be the result of the not close proximity of the two guests, which are confined in different compartments of the same polymeric host. The supramolecular complex is stable in a culture medium, and its biological activity has been evaluated against HEP-G2 hepatocarcinoma cell lines in the dark and under irradiation with visible green light, using LVB at a concentration well below the IC50. Comparative experiments performed using the polymeric host encapsulating the individual LVB and RD-NO components under the same experimental conditions show that the moderate cell mortality induced by the ternary complex in the dark increases significantly upon irradiation with visible green light, more likely as the result of synergism between the NO photogenerated and the chemotherapeutic.

7.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 12(24)2022 Dec 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36558329

RESUMO

Au nanostructures exhibiting a localized surface plasmon resonance in the near-infrared spectral window are obtained in a single, green step at room temperature by pomegranate extract in the presence of a highly biocompatible ß-cyclodextrin branched polymer, without the need of preformed seeds, external reducing and sacrificial agents, and conventional surfactants. The polymeric component makes the Au nanostructures dispersible in water, stable for weeks and permits their supramolecular assembling with the chemotherapeutic sorafenib and a nitric oxide (NO) photodonor (NOPD), chosen as representative for chemo- and photo-therapeutics. Irradiation of the plasmonic Au nanostructures in the therapeutic window with 808 nm laser light results in a good photothermal response, which (i) is not affected by the presence of either the chemo- or the phototherapeutic guests and (ii) does not lead to their photoinduced decomposition. Besides, irradiation of the hybrid Au nanoassembly with the highly biocompatible green light results in the NO release from the NOPD with efficiency similar to that observed for the free guest. Preliminary biological experiments against Hep-G2 hepatocarcinoma cell lines are also reported.

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