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Exploiting a Rose Bengal-bearing, oxygen-producing nanoparticle for SDT and associated immune-mediated therapeutic effects in the treatment of pancreatic cancer

Authors :
John F. Callan
Barry O'Hagan
Nikolitsa Nomikou
Paul J Kelly
Bridgeen Callan
Simon L Porter
Eva McMullin
Dean Nicholas
Declan O'Rourke
Anthony P. McHale
Sian Farrell
Tierna Gillan
Heather Nesbitt
Keith Thomas
Keirin Logan
Source :
European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics. 163:49-59
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Sonodynamic therapy (SDT) is an emerging stimulus-responsive approach for the targeted treatment of solid tumours. However, its ability to generate stimulus-responsive cytotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS), is compromised by tumour hypoxia. Here we describe a robust means of preparing a pH-sensitive polymethacrylate-coated CaO2 nanoparticle that is capable of transiently alleviating tumour hypoxia. Systemic administration of particles to animals bearing human xenograft BxPC3 pancreatic tumours increases oxygen partial pressures (PO2) to 20–50 mmHg for over 40 min. RT-qPCR analysis of expression of selected tumour marker genes in treated animals suggests that the transient production of oxygen is sufficient to elicit effects at a molecular genetic level. Using particles labelled with the near infra-red (nIR) fluorescent dye, indocyanine green, selective uptake of particles by tumours was observed. Systemic administration of particles containing Rose Bengal (RB) at concentrations of 0.1 mg/mg of particles are capable of eliciting nanoparticle-induced, SDT-mediated antitumour effects using the BxPC3 human pancreatic tumour model in immuno-compromised mice. Additionally, a potent abscopal effect was observed in off-target tumours in a syngeneic murine bilateral tumour model for pancreatic cancer and an increase in tumour cytotoxic T cells (CD8+) and a decrease in immunosuppressive tumour regulatory T cells [Treg (CD4+, FoxP3+)] was observed in both target and off-target tumours in SDT treated animals. We suggest that this approach offers significant potential in the treatment of both focal and disseminated (metastatic) pancreatic cancer.

Details

ISSN :
09396411
Volume :
163
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec05b0a0b74b3c65d17998bf0ae7a266