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Biomimetic Nanomedicine Targeting Orchestrated Metabolism Coupled with Regulatory Factors to Disrupt the Metabolic Plasticity of Breast Cancer.

ACS Nano 2024 January 27
Targeting nutrient metabolism has been proposed as an effective therapeutic strategy to combat breast cancer because of its high nutrient requirements. However, metabolic plasticity enables breast cancer cells to survive under unfavorable starvation conditions. The key mammalian target regulators rapamycin (mTOR) and hypoxia-inducible-factor-1 (HIF-1) tightly link the dynamic metabolism of glutamine and glucose to maintain nutrient flux. Blocking nutrient flow also induces autophagy to recycle nutrients in the autophagosome, which exacerbates metastasis and tumor progression. Compared to other common cancers, breast cancer is even more dependent on mTOR and HIF-1 to orchestrate the metabolic network. Therefore, we develop a cascade-boosting integrated nanomedicine to reprogram complementary metabolism coupled with regulators in breast cancer. Glucose oxidase efficiently consumes glucose, while the delivery of rapamycin inside limits the metabolic flux of glutamine and uncouples the feedback regulation of mTOR and HIF-1. The hydroxyl radical generated in a cascade blocks the later phase of autophagy without nutrient recycling. This nanomedicine targeting orchestrated metabolism can disrupt the coordination of glucose, amino acids, nucleotides, lipids, and other metabolic pathways in breast cancer tissues, effectively improving the durable antitumor effect and prognosis of breast cancer. Overall, the cascade-boosting integrated system provides a viable strategy to address cellular plasticity and efficient enzyme delivery.

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