1 research outputs found
Calcium Carbonate/Polydopamine Composite Nanoplatform Based on TGF‑β Blockade for Comfortable Cancer Immunotherapy
Cancer pain seriously reduces the quality of life of
cancer patients.
However, most research about cancer focuses solely on inhibiting tumor
growth, neglecting the issue of cancer pain. Therefore, the development
of therapeutic agents with both tumor suppression and cancer pain
relief is crucial to achieve human-centered treatment. Here, the work
reports curcumin (CUR) and ropivacaine (Ropi) coincorporating CaCO3/PDA nanoparticles (CaPNMCUR+Ropi) that realized
efficient tumor immunotherapy and cancer pain suppression. The therapeutic
efficiency and mechanism are revealed in vitro and in vivo. The results
indicate that CaPNMCUR+Ropi underwent tumor microenvironment-responsive
degradation and realized rapid release of calcium ions, Ropi, and
CUR. The excessive intracellular calcium triggered the apoptosis of
tumor cells, and the transient pain caused by the tumor injection
was relieved by Ropi. Simultaneously, CUR reduced the levels of immunosuppressive
factor (TGF-β) and inflammatory factor (IL-6, IL-1β, and
TNF-α) in the tumor microenvironment, thereby continuously augmenting
the immune response and alleviating inflammatory pain of cancer animals.
Meanwhile, the decrease of TGF-β leads to the reduction of transient
receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) expression, thereby alleviating
hyperalgesia and achieving long-lasting analgesic effects. The design
of the nanosystem provides a novel idea for human-centered tumor treatment
in the future