In vivo guiding nitrogen-doped carbon nanozyme for tumor catalytic therapy

Kelong Fan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Juqun Xi(Yangzhou University), Lei Fan(Yangzhou University), Peixia Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chunhua Zhu(Yangzhou University), Yan Tang(Yangzhou University), Xiangdong Xu(Yangzhou University), Minmin Liang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bing Jiang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiyun Yan(Institute of Biophysics), Lizeng Gao(Yangzhou University)
Nature Communications
April 11, 2018
Cited by 1,054Open Access
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Abstract

Nanomaterials with intrinsic enzyme-like activities (nanozymes), have been widely used as artificial enzymes in biomedicine. However, how to control their in vivo performance in a target cell is still challenging. Here we report a strategy to coordinate nanozymes to target tumor cells and selectively perform their activity to destruct tumors. We develop a nanozyme using nitrogen-doped porous carbon nanospheres which possess four enzyme-like activities (oxidase, peroxidase, catalase and superoxide dismutase) responsible for reactive oxygen species regulation. We then introduce ferritin to guide nitrogen-doped porous carbon nanospheres into lysosomes and boost reactive oxygen species generation in a tumor-specific manner, resulting in significant tumor regression in human tumor xenograft mice models. Together, our study provides evidence that nitrogen-doped porous carbon nanospheres are powerful nanozymes capable of regulating intracellular reactive oxygen species, and ferritinylation is a promising strategy to render nanozymes to target tumor cells for in vivo tumor catalytic therapy.


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