RESUMEN
Sonodynamic therapy (SDT), which involves the activation of sonosensitizers to generate cytotoxic reactive oxygen species under ultrasound irradiation, is a promising noninvasive modality for cancer treatment. However, the clinical translational application of SDT is impeded by the lack of efficient sonosensitizers, the inefficient accumulation of sonosensitizers at tumor sites, and the complicated immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Herein, we developed a facilely synthesized multifunctional porous organic polymer nanosonosensitizer (mHM@HMME) for enhanced SDT. Specifically, mHM@HMME nanosonosensitizers were prepared by incorporating chemotherapeutic mitoxantrone into the one-step synthesis process of disulfide bond containing porous organic polymers, followed by loading with organic sonosensitizer (HMME) and camouflaging with a cancer cell membrane. Due to the cancer cell membrane camouflage, this multifunctional mHM@HMME nanosonosensitizer showed prolonged blood circulation and tumor targeting aggregation. Under ultrasound irradiation, the mHM@HMME nanosonosensitizer exhibited a satisfactory SDT performance both in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, the potent SDT combined with glutathione-responsive drug release in tumor cells induced robust immunogenic cell death to enhance the antitumor effect of SDT in turn. Overall, this facilely synthesized multifunctional mHM@HMME nanosonosensitizer shows great potential application in enhanced SDT.
Asunto(s)
Polímeros , Terapia por Ultrasonido , Animales , Ratones , Humanos , Porosidad , Terapia por Ultrasonido/métodos , Polímeros/química , Polímeros/síntesis química , Polímeros/farmacología , Antineoplásicos/química , Antineoplásicos/farmacología , Ratones Endogámicos BALB C , Neoplasias/terapia , Neoplasias/tratamiento farmacológico , Neoplasias/patología , Línea Celular Tumoral , Nanopartículas/química , Especies Reactivas de Oxígeno/metabolismo , FemeninoRESUMEN
Sonodynamic therapy (SDT) benefiting from its intrinsic merits, such as noninvasiveness and deep tissue penetrability, is receiving increasing considerable attention in reactive oxygen species (ROS)-based tumor treatment. However, current sonosensitizers usually suffer from low tumor lesion accumulation, insufficient ROS generation efficiency under ultrasound, and non-biodegradability, which seriously impede the therapeutic outcomes. Additionally, it is difficult that SDT alone can completely eradicate tumors because of the complex and immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). Herein, we simultaneously employ sonosensitive porphyrin building blocks and glutathione (GSH)-responsive disulfide bonds to construct a novel degradable multifunctional porphyrin-based hollow porous organic polymer (POP) nanosonosensitizer (H-Pys-HA@M/R), which combine SDT, "on-demand" chemotherapy, and immunotherapy. Taking the unique advantages of POPs with designable structures and high specific surface area, this H-Pys-HA@M/R nanosonosensitizer can achieve tumor target accumulation, GSH-triggered drug release, and low-frequency ultrasound-activating ROS generation with encouraging results. Furthermore, this multifunctional nanosonosensitizer can effectively evoke immunogenic cell death (ICD) response through the combination of SDT and chemotherapy for both primary and distal tumor growth suppression. Meanwhile, H-Pys-HA@M/R exhibits favorable biodegradation and biosafety. Therefore, this study provides a new strategy for reasonably designing and constructing POP-related sonosensitizers combining SDT/chemotherapy/immunotherapy triple treatment modalities to eradicate malignant tumors.