Issue 46, 2024

Advancing rhodium nanoparticle-based photodynamic cancer therapy: quantitative proteomics and in vivo assessment reveal mechanisms targeting tumor metabolism, progression and drug resistance

Abstract

Rhodium nanoparticles have been recently discovered as good photosensitizers with great potential in cancer photodynamic therapy by effectively inducing cytotoxicity in cancer cells under near-infrared laser. This study evaluates the molecular mechanisms underlying such antitumoral effect through quantitative proteomics. The results revealed that rhodium nanoparticle-based photodynamic therapy disrupts tumor metabolism by downregulating key proteins involved in ATP synthesis and mitochondrial function, leading to compromised energy production. The treatment also induces oxidative stress and apoptosis while targeting the invasion capacity of cancer cells. Additionally, key proteins involved in drug resistance are also affected, demonstrating the efficacy of the treatment in a multi-drug resistant cell line. In vivo evaluation using a chicken embryo model also confirmed the effectiveness of the proposed therapy in reducing tumor growth without affecting embryo viability.

Graphical abstract: Advancing rhodium nanoparticle-based photodynamic cancer therapy: quantitative proteomics and in vivo assessment reveal mechanisms targeting tumor metabolism, progression and drug resistance

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Jul 2024
Accepted
20 Oct 2024
First published
21 Oct 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

J. Mater. Chem. B, 2024,12, 12073-12086

Advancing rhodium nanoparticle-based photodynamic cancer therapy: quantitative proteomics and in vivo assessment reveal mechanisms targeting tumor metabolism, progression and drug resistance

A. Machuca, G. A. Peñalver, R. A. Garcia, A. Martinez-Lopez, S. Castillo-Lluva, E. Garcia-Calvo and J. L. Luque-Garcia, J. Mater. Chem. B, 2024, 12, 12073 DOI: 10.1039/D4TB01631A

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