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In-situ-sprayed therapeutic hydrogel for oxygen-actuated Janus regulation of postsurgical tumor recurrence/metastasis and wound healing

Shuiling Chen, Yang Luo, Yang He, Ming Li, Yongjian Liu, X Zhou, Jianwen Hou, Shaobing Zhou

2024Nature Communications147 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Surgery is the mainstay of treatment modality for malignant melanoma. However, the deteriorative hypoxic microenvironment after surgery is recognized as a stemming cause for tumor recurrence/metastasis and delayed wound healing. Here we design and construct a sprayable therapeutic hydrogel (HIL@Z/P/H) encapsulating tumor-targeted nanodrug and photosynthetic cyanobacteria (PCC 7942) to prevent tumor recurrence/metastasis while promote wound healing. In a postsurgical B16F10 melanoma model in female mice, the nanodrug can disrupt cellular redox homeostasis via the photodynamic therapy-induced cascade reactions within tumor cells. Besides, the photosynthetically generated O 2 by PCC 7942 can not only potentiate the oxidative stress-triggered cell death to prevent local recurrence of residual tumor cells, but also block the signaling pathway of hypoxia-inducible factor 1α to inhibit their distant metastasis. Furthermore, the long-lasting O 2 supply and PCC 7942-secreted extracellular vesicles can jointly promote angiogenesis and accelerate the wound healing process. Taken together, the developed HIL@Z/P/H capable of preventing tumor recurrence/metastasis while promoting wound healing shows great application potential for postsurgical cancer therapy.

Topics & Concepts

MetastasisWound healingCancer researchMelanomaMedicineAngiogenesisPrimary tumorTumor microenvironmentPhotodynamic therapyCell migrationCancerChemistryCellSurgeryInternal medicineTumor cellsOrganic chemistryBiochemistryNanoplatforms for cancer theranosticsPhotodynamic Therapy Research StudiesCancer, Hypoxia, and Metabolism
In-situ-sprayed therapeutic hydrogel for oxygen-actuated Janus regulation of postsurgical tumor recurrence/metastasis and wound healing | Litcius