Ultrasound-based engineering of carrier-free nanodrugs by supramolecular self-assembly has recently emerged as an innovative and environmentally friendly synthetic approach. By applying high-frequency sound waves (490 kHz) in aqueous solutions, the transformation of small chemotherapeutic and antibiotic drug molecules into carrier-free nanodrugs with anticancer and antimicrobial activities was recently achieved. The transformation of the antibiotic drug molecules, i.e., doxycycline, into stable nanodrugs (similar to 130 nm) with selective anticancer activity was achieved without requiring organic solvents, chemical agents, or surfactants. The obtained nanodrug exhibited reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated cytotoxicity on human breast cancer (MDA-MB 231 cells) but a negligible antiproliferative effect on healthy fibroblast cells. Imaging by super-resolution microscopy (STORM) provided insights into the intracellular trafficking and endosomal escape of the nanodrugs. Overall, these findings suggest that small antibiotic drugs can be transformed into chemotherapeutic nanodrugs with high selectivity against cancer cells.

Zhu, H., Bhangu, S.k., Ashokkumar, M., Cavalieri, F. (2023). Ultrasonic transformation of antibiotic molecules into a selective chemotherapeutic nanodrug. MOLECULES, 28(13) [10.3390/molecules28134927].

Ultrasonic transformation of antibiotic molecules into a selective chemotherapeutic nanodrug

Cavalieri, Francesca
2023-06-22

Abstract

Ultrasound-based engineering of carrier-free nanodrugs by supramolecular self-assembly has recently emerged as an innovative and environmentally friendly synthetic approach. By applying high-frequency sound waves (490 kHz) in aqueous solutions, the transformation of small chemotherapeutic and antibiotic drug molecules into carrier-free nanodrugs with anticancer and antimicrobial activities was recently achieved. The transformation of the antibiotic drug molecules, i.e., doxycycline, into stable nanodrugs (similar to 130 nm) with selective anticancer activity was achieved without requiring organic solvents, chemical agents, or surfactants. The obtained nanodrug exhibited reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated cytotoxicity on human breast cancer (MDA-MB 231 cells) but a negligible antiproliferative effect on healthy fibroblast cells. Imaging by super-resolution microscopy (STORM) provided insights into the intracellular trafficking and endosomal escape of the nanodrugs. Overall, these findings suggest that small antibiotic drugs can be transformed into chemotherapeutic nanodrugs with high selectivity against cancer cells.
22-giu-2023
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore CHIM/02
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
anticancer
doxycycline
intracellular trafficking
nanoparticles
ultrasound
Zhu, H., Bhangu, S.k., Ashokkumar, M., Cavalieri, F. (2023). Ultrasonic transformation of antibiotic molecules into a selective chemotherapeutic nanodrug. MOLECULES, 28(13) [10.3390/molecules28134927].
Zhu, H; Bhangu, Sk; Ashokkumar, M; Cavalieri, F
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/345594
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