SiO 2 /hyaluronic acid nanoparticles carry CaO 2 , DOX and p53 plasmid to effectively achieve ion interference/chemical/gene multimodal therapy of lung cancer

Monotherapy of lung cancer shows limited therapeutic effects due to its poorly targeted enrichment and low bioavailability. Using nanomaterials as carriers to form drug delivery systems has become a popular method to improve the targeting of anticancer drug therapy and patients' safety. However...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBiomaterials science Vol. 11; no. 12; pp. 4346 - 4358
Main Authors Zhuo, Yi, Huang, Xuan, Lin, Nan-Long, Yu, Feng-Qiang, Chen, Yan-Xun, Guan, Mao-Hao, Yi, Wei-Qiang, Lai, Fan-Cai
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 13.06.2023
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Monotherapy of lung cancer shows limited therapeutic effects due to its poorly targeted enrichment and low bioavailability. Using nanomaterials as carriers to form drug delivery systems has become a popular method to improve the targeting of anticancer drug therapy and patients' safety. However, the uniformity of the loaded drugs and the unsatisfactory effects are still the bottleneck in this field up to now. This study aims to construct a novel nanocomposite carrying 3 different types of anticancer drugs to enhance treatment efficacy. Herein, mesoporous silica (MSN) with high loading rate was constructed by dilute sulfuric acid thermal etching as the framework. Hyaluronic acid (HA) was loaded with CaO , p53 and DOX to construct nanoparticle complexes-SiO @CaO @DOX@P53-HA. First, MSN was proved to be a porous sorbent with a mesoporous structure through BET analysis. The images obtained from the uptake experiment clearly show the gradual enrichment of the DOX and Ca within the target cell. For experiments, the pro-apoptotic effects of SiO @CaO @DOX@P53-HA significantly increased compared to that of the single-agent group at different time points. Furthermore, in the tumor-bearing mouse experiment, the tumor volume was remarkably inhibited in the SiO @CaO @DOX@P53-HA group compared to that in the single-agent group. By observing the pathological sections of the euthanized mice, it is obvious that the tissues of the mice treated with the nanoparticles were more intact. Based on these beneficial results, it is believed that multimodal therapy is a meaningful treatment strategy for lung cancer.
ISSN:2047-4830
2047-4849
DOI:10.1039/D2BM02075K