AI Article Synopsis

  • Advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) treatment faces challenges, creating a need for effective alternative therapies; this study explores the use of HCC-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) as a delivery system for targeted treatment through nanocatalysts.* -
  • The unique design of the nanocarrier, referred to as GOD-ESIONs@EVs (GE@EVs), enhances the uptake of therapeutic agents in HCC cells via RGD-targeting, allowing for efficient tumor suppression and triggering cell death.* -
  • In addition to their therapeutic role, these engineered EVs show potential as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging, suggesting broad applications in biomedicine beyond just cancer treatment.*

Article Abstract

Conventional therapeutic strategies for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains a great challenge, therefore the alternative therapeutic modality for specific and efficient HCC suppression is urgently needed. In this work, HCC-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) were applied as surface nanocarrier for sequential nanocatalysts GOD-ESIONs@EVs (GE@EVs) of tumor-specific and cascade nanocatalytic therapy against HCC. By enhancing the intracellular endocytosis through arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD)-targeting effect and membrane fusion, sequential nanocatalysts led to more efficient treatment in the HCC tumor region in a shorter period of time. Through glucose consumption as catalyzed by the loaded glucose oxidase (GOD) to overproduce hydrogen peroxide (HO), highly toxic hydroxyl radicals were generated by Fenton-like reaction as catalyzed by ESIONs, which was achieved under the mildly acidic tumor microenvironment, enabling the stimuli of the apoptosis and necrosis of HCC cells. This strategy demonstrated the high active-targeting capability of GE@EVs into HCC, achieving highly efficient tumor suppression both and . In addition, the as-synthesized nanoreactor could act as a desirable nanoscale contrast agent for magnetic resonance imaging, which exhibited desirable imaging capability during the sequential nanocatalytic treatment. This application of surface-engineering EVs not only proves the high-performance catalytic therapeutic modality of GE@EVs for HCC, but also broadens the versatile bio-applications of EVs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7681081PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.46124DOI Listing

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