X-ray induced photodynamic therapy with copper-cysteamine nanoparticles in mice tumors

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Abstract

Photodynamic therapy (PDT), a treatment that uses a photosensitizer, molecular oxygen, and light to kill target cells, is a promising cancer treatment method. However, a limitation of PDT is its dependence on light that is not highly penetrating, precluding the treatment of tumors located deep in the body. Copper-cysteamine nanoparticles are a new type of photosensitizer that can generate cytotoxic singlet oxygen molecules upon activation by X-rays. In this paper, we report on the use of copper-cysteamine nanoparticles, designed to be targeted to tumors, for X-ray–induced PDT. In an in vivo study, results show a statistically significant reduction in tumor size under X-ray activation of pH-low insertion peptide–conjugated, copper-cysteamine nanoparticles in mouse tumors. This work confirms the effectiveness of copper-cysteamine nanoparticles as a photosensitizer when activated by radiation and suggests that these Cu-Cy nanoparticles may be good candidates for PDT in deeply seated tumors when combined with X-rays and conjugated to a tumor-targeting molecule.

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Shrestha, S., Wu, J., Sah, B., Vanasse, A., Cooper, L. N., Ma, L., … Antosh, M. P. (2019). X-ray induced photodynamic therapy with copper-cysteamine nanoparticles in mice tumors. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(34), 16823–16828. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1900502116

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