4.8 Article

Dual-Stage Irradiation of Size-Switchable Albumin Nanocluster for Cascaded Tumor Enhanced Penetration and Photothermal Therapy

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.2c02965

Keywords

tumor penetration; photothermal therapy; dual-stage irradiation; size-switchable nanocluster; homing peptide

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52003086, 51903062, 21972047]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M672625, 2021T140213]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province, China [2021A1515010724]
  4. Guangdong Provincial Pearl River Talents Program [2019QN01Y314]
  5. Program for Guangdong Introducing Innovative and Entrepreneurial Teams [2019ZT08Y318]
  6. Science and Technology Project of Guangzhou, China [202102020352, 202102020259]
  7. Guang-dong Key Areas RD Program [2022B1111080007]
  8. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China
  9. Science and Technology Foundation of Shenzhen [JCYJ20200109144410181]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The microenvironment of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) reduces the delivery and penetration of therapeutic agents, making it difficult to eliminate cancer cells completely. In this study, a photothermal nanocluster was constructed using a size-shrinkage and ligand modification strategy, allowing for deep penetration and efficient eradication of TNBC cells.
The triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) microenvironment makes a feature of aberrant vasculature, high interstitial pressure, and compact extracellular matrix, which combine to reduce the delivery and penetration of therapeutic agents, bringing about incomplete elimination of cancer cells. Herein, employing the tumor penetration strategy of size-shrinkage combined with ligand modification, we constructed a photothermal nanocluster for cascaded deep penetration in tumor parenchyma and efficient eradication of TNBC cells. In our approach, the photothermal agent indocyanine green (ICG) is laded in human serum albumin (HSA), which is cross-linked by a thermally labile azo linker (VA057) and then further modified with a tumor homing/penetrating tLyP-1 peptide (HP), resulting in a TNBC-targeting photothermal-responsive size-switchable albumin nanocluster (ICG@HSA-Azo-HP). Aided by the enhanced permeability and retention effect and guidance of HP, the ca. 149 nm nanoclusters selectively accumulate in the tumor site and then, upon mild irradiation with the 808 nm laser, disintegrate into 11 nm albumin fractions that possess enhanced intratumoral diffusion ability. Meanwhile, HP initiates the CendR pathway among the nutrient-deficient tumor cells and facilitates the transcellular delivery of the nanocluster and its disintegrated fractions for subsequent therapy. By employing this size-shrinkage and peptide-initiated transcytosis strategy, ICG@HSA-Azo-HP possesses excellent penetration capabilities and shows extensive penetration depth in three-dimensional multicellular tumor spheroids after irradiation. Moreover, with a superior photothermal conversion effect, the tumor-penetrating nanocluster can implement effective photothermal therapy throughout the tumor tissue under a second robust irradiation. Both in vivo orthotopic and ectopic TNBC therapy confirmed the efficient tumor inhibition of ICG@HSA-Azo-HP after dual-stage irradiation. The synergistic penetration strategy of on-demanded size-shrinkage and ligand guidance accompanied by clinically feasible NIR irradiation provides a promising approach for deep-penetrating TNBC therapy.

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