AI Article Synopsis

  • * The study introduces a novel artemisinin-copper nanoprodrug that combines CDT with chemotherapy to enhance ROS production and improve treatment effectiveness.
  • * Using a self-assembly technique, the nanoprodrug exhibits excellent drug loading and can significantly inhibit tumor growth by generating ROS through a Fenton-like reaction, achieving a tumor inhibition rate of 62.48%.

Article Abstract

Chemodynamic therapy (CDT) is a tumor-specific intervention methodology, which is based on the upregulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) content by triggering the Fenton or Fenton-like reaction within the tumor microenvironment (TME). However, there are still challenges in achieving high-efficiency CDT on account of both the limited intracellular hydrogen peroxide (HO) and delivery efficiency of Fenton metal ions. Copper-based nanotherapeutic systems have attracted extensive attention and have been widely applied in the construction of nanotherapeutic systems and multimodal synergistic therapy. Herein, we propose a strategy to synergize chemotherapy drugs that upregulate intracellular ROS content with chemodynamic therapy and construct an artemisinin-copper nanoprodrug for proof-of-concept. With the proposed biomimetic self-assembly strategy, we successfully construct an injectable nanoprodrug with suitable size distribution and high drug loading content (68.1 wt%) through the self-assembly of amphiphilic artemisinin prodrug and copper ions. After reaching the TME, both Cu ions and free AH drugs can be released from AHCu nanoprodrugs. Subsequently, the disassembled Cu ions are converted into Cu ions by consuming the intracellular GSH. The generated Cu ions serve as a highly efficient Fenton-like reagent for robust ROS generation from both AH and tumor-over-produced HO. Results show that the nanoprodrug can realize the cascade amplification of ROS generation artemisinin delivery and subsequent Fenton-like reaction and a high tumor inhibition rate of 62.48% . This work provides a promising strategy for the design and development of an efficient nanoprodrug for tumor-specific treatment.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4tb01237bDOI Listing

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