Author
Listed:
- Kun Zhang
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University
Guangxi Medical University)
- Yan Fang
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Yaping He
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Haohao Yin
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Xin Guan
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Yinying Pu
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Bangguo Zhou
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Wenwen Yue
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Weiwei Ren
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Dou Du
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Hongyan Li
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Chang Liu
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Liping Sun
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
- Yu Chen
(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
- Huixiong Xu
(Tongji University School of Medicine, Tongji University)
Abstract
Despite the efficacy of current starvation therapies, they are often associated with some intrinsic drawbacks such as poor persistence, facile tumor metastasis and recurrence. Herein, we establish an extravascular gelation shrinkage-derived internal stress strategy for squeezing and narrowing blood vessels, occluding blood & nutrition supply, reducing vascular density, inducing hypoxia and apoptosis and eventually realizing starvation therapy of malignancies. To this end, a biocompatible composite hydrogel consisting of gold nanorods (GNRs) and thermal-sensitive hydrogel mixture was engineered, wherein GRNs can strengthen the structural property of hydrogel mixture and enable robust gelation shrinkage-induced internal stresses. Systematic experiments demonstrate that this starvation therapy can suppress the growths of PANC-1 pancreatic cancer and 4T1 breast cancer. More significantly, this starvation strategy can suppress tumor metastasis and tumor recurrence via reducing vascular density and blood supply and occluding tumor migration passages, which thus provides a promising avenue to comprehensive cancer therapy.
Suggested Citation
Kun Zhang & Yan Fang & Yaping He & Haohao Yin & Xin Guan & Yinying Pu & Bangguo Zhou & Wenwen Yue & Weiwei Ren & Dou Du & Hongyan Li & Chang Liu & Liping Sun & Yu Chen & Huixiong Xu, 2019.
"Extravascular gelation shrinkage-derived internal stress enables tumor starvation therapy with suppressed metastasis and recurrence,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 10(1), pages 1-17, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:10:y:2019:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-019-13115-3
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-13115-3
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