Albumin-biomineralized copper sulfide nanoparticles (CuS NPs) have attracted much attention as an emerging phototheranostic agent due to their advantages of facile preparation method and high biocompatibility. However, comprehensive preclinical safety evaluation is the only way to meet its further clinical translation. We herein evaluate detailedly the safety and hepatotoxicity of bovine serum albumin-biomineralized CuS (BSA@CuS) NPs with two different sizes in rats. Large-sized (LNPs, 17.8 nm) and small-sized (SNPs, 2.8 nm) BSA@CuS NPs with great near-infrared absorption and photothermal conversion efficiency are firstly obtained. Seven days after a single-dose intravenous administration, SNPs distributed throughout the body are cleared primarily through the feces, while a large amount of LNPs remained in the liver. A 14-day subacute toxicity study with a 28-day recovery period are conducted, showing long-term hepatotoxicity without recovery for LNPs but reversible toxicity for SNPs. Cellular uptake studies indicate that LNPs prefer to reside in Kupffer cells, leading to prolonged and delayed hepatotoxicity even after the cessation of NPs administration, while SNPs have much less Kupffer cell uptake. RNA-sequencing analysis for gene expression indicates that the inflammatory pathway, lipid metabolism pathway, drug metabolism-cytochrome P450 pathway, cholesterol/bile acid metabolism pathway, and copper ion transport/metabolism pathway are compromised in the liver by two sizes of BSA@CuS NPs, while only SNPs show a complete recovery of altered gene expression after NPs discontinuation. This study demonstrates that the translational feasibility of small-sized BSA@CuS NPs as excellent nanoagents with manageable hepatotoxicity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12951-022-01399-5 | DOI Listing |
Mater Today Bio
December 2022
Clinical Research Institute, Zhejiang Provincial People's Hospital, Affiliated People's Hospital of Hangzhou Medical College, Hangzhou, China.
Thyroid cancer, as one of the most common endocrine cancers, has seen a surge in incidence in recent years. This is most likely due to the lack of specificity and accuracy of its traditional diagnostic modalities, leading to the overdiagnosis of thyroid nodules. Although there are several treatment options available, they are limited to surgery and I radiation therapy that come with significant side effects and hence cannot meet the treatment needs of anaplastic thyroid carcinoma with very high malignancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Pharm
October 2020
Cancer Centre, Institute of Translational Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Macau, Macau SAR 999078, China.
The limited tumor tissue penetration of many nanoparticles remains a formidable challenge to their therapeutic efficacy. Although several photonanomedicines have been applied to improve tumor penetration, the first near-infrared window mediated by the low optical tissue penetration depth severely limits their anticancer effectiveness. To achieve deep optical tissue and drug delivery penetration, a near-infrared second window (NIR-II)-excited and pH-responsive ultrasmall drug delivery nanoplatform was fabricated based on BSA-stabilized CuS nanoparticles (BSA@CuS NPs).
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