Selective inhibition of liver cancer growth realized by the intrinsic toxicity of a quantum dot-lipid complex

Open Access
Authors
  • D. Shao
  • J. Li
  • F. Guan
  • Y. Pan
  • X. Xiao
  • M. Zhang
  • H. Zhang
  • L. Chen
Publication date 2014
Journal International Journal of Nanomedicine
Volume | Issue number 9 | 1
Pages (from-to) 5753-5769
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Van 't Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences (HIMS)
Abstract
Using the intrinsic toxicity of nanomaterials for anticancer therapy is an emerging concept. In this work, we discovered that CdTe/CdS quantum dots, when coated with lipids (QD-LC) instead of popular liposomes, polymers, or dendrimers, demonstrated extraordinarily high specificity for cancer cells, which was due to the difference in the macropinocytosis uptake pathways of QD-LC between the cancer cells and the normal cells. QD-LC-induced HepG2 cell apoptosis was concomitant with the activation of the JNK/caspase-3 signaling pathway. Moreover, QD-LC treatment resulted in a delay in the latent period for microtumor formation of mouse hepatocarcinoma H22 cells and inhibited tumor growth, with a reduction of 53.2% in tumor volume without toxicity in major organs after intratumoral administrations to tumorbearing mice. Our results demonstrate that QD-LC could be a very promising theranostic agent against liver cancer.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S73185
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