A Lysosome‐Targeted Magnetic Nanotorquer Mechanically Triggers Ferroptosis for Breast Cancer Treatment

Xueyan Wei(Tongji University), Yingze Li(Tongji University), Haotian Chen(Tongji University), Rui Gao(Tongji University), Peng Ning(Tongji University), Yingying Wang(Tongji University), Wanxin Huang(Tongji University), Erzhen Chen(Tongji University), Lan Fang(Tongji University), Xingrong Guo(Hubei University of Medicine), Cheng Lv(Tongji University), Yu Cheng(Tongji University)
Advanced Science
December 14, 2023
Cited by 35Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract Targeting ferroptosis has attracted exponential attention to eradicate cancer cells with high iron‐dependent growth. Increasing the level of intracellular labile iron pool via small molecules and iron‐containing nanomaterials is an effective approach to induce ferroptosis but often faces insufficient efficacy due to the fast drug metabolism and toxicity issues on normal tissues. Therefore, developing a long‐acting and selective approach to regulate ferroptosis is highly demanded in cancer treatment. Herein, a lysosome‐targeted magnetic nanotorquer (T7‐MNT) is proposed as the mechanical tool to dynamically induce the endogenous Fe 2+ pool outbreak for ferroptosis of breast cancer. T7‐MNTs target lysosomes via the transferrin receptor‐mediated endocytosis in breast cancer cells. Under the programmed rotating magnetic field, T7‐MNTs generate torques to trigger endogenous Fe 2+ release by disrupting the lysosomal membrane. This magneto‐mechanical manipulation can induce oxidative damage and antioxidant defense imbalance to boost frequency‐ and time‐dependent lipid peroxidization. Importantly, in vivo studies show that T7‐MNTs can efficiently trigger ferroptosis under the magnetic field and play as a long‐acting physical inducer to boost ferrotherapy efficacy in combination with RSL3. It is anticipated that this dynamic targeted strategy can be coupled with current ferroptosis inducers to achieve enhanced efficacy and inspire the design of mechanical‐based ferroptosis inducers for cancer treatment.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis