Photoactivated DNA Nanodrugs Damage Mitochondria to Improve Gene Therapy for Reversing Chemoresistance

Multidrug resistance (MDR) is a major cause of chemotherapy failure in oncology, and gene therapy is an excellent measure to reverse MDR. However, conventional gene therapy only modulates the expression of MDR-associated proteins but hardly affects their existing function, thus limiting the efficien...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS nano 2023-09, Vol.17 (17), p.16923-16934
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Danyu, Yi, Hua, Geng, Shizhen, Jiang, Chuanmei, Liu, Jingwen, Duan, Jie, Zhang, Zhenzhong, Shi, Jinjin, Song, Haiwei, Guo, Zhenzhen, Zhang, Kaixiang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Multidrug resistance (MDR) is a major cause of chemotherapy failure in oncology, and gene therapy is an excellent measure to reverse MDR. However, conventional gene therapy only modulates the expression of MDR-associated proteins but hardly affects their existing function, thus limiting the efficiency of tumor treatment. Herein, we designed a photoactivated DNA nanodrug (MCD@TMPyP4@DOX) to improve tumor chemosensitivity through the downregulation of MDR-related genes and mitochondria-targeted photodynamic therapy (PDT). The self-assembled DNA nanodrug encodes the mucin 1 (MUC1) aptamer and the cytochrome C (CytC) aptamer to facilitate its selective targeting to the mitochondria in tumor cells; the encoded P-gp DNAzyme can specifically cleave the substrate and silence MDR1 mRNA with the help of Mg2+ cofactors. Under near-infrared (NIR) light irradiation, PDT generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that precisely damage the mitochondria of tumor cells and break single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) to activate MCD@TMPyP4@DOX self-disassembly for release of DOX and DNAzyme. We have demonstrated that this multifunctional DNA nanodrug has high drug delivery capacity and biosafety. It enables downregulation of P-gp expression while reducing the ATP on which P-gp pumps out drugs, improving the latency of gene therapy and synergistically reducing DOX efflux to sensitize tumor chemotherapy. We envision that this gene-modulating DNA nanodrug based on damaging mitochondria is expected to provide an important perspective for sensitizing tumor chemotherapy.
ISSN:1936-0851
1936-086X
DOI:10.1021/acsnano.3c04002