Cellular Toxicity Mechanisms and the Role of Autophagy in Pt(IV) Prodrug-Loaded Ultrasmall Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Used for Enhanced Drug Delivery
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Gutiérrez Romero, Lucía; Rivas García, Lorenzo; Sánchez González, Cristina; Llopis González, JuanEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Nanoparticles Cisplatin prodrug DNA Apoptosis Autophagy Mitochondria
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Gutiérrez-Romero, L.; Rivas-García, L.; Sánchez-González, C.; Llopis, J.; Blanco, E.; Montes-Bayón, M. Cellular Toxicity Mechanisms and the Role of Autophagy in Pt(IV) Prodrug-Loaded Ultrasmall Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Used for Enhanced Drug Delivery. Pharmaceutics 2021, 13, 1730. https://doi.org/10.3390/ pharmaceutics13101730
Sponsorship
The financial support through the regional funding from the government of Asturias through the Science, Technology and Innovation Plan (PCTI), co-financed by FEDER funds (ref. FCGRUPIN-IDI/2018/000242), and the funding from the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (MINECO) through the project RTI2018-094605-B-I00 are gratefully acknowledged. Thermo Fisher Scientific (Bremen, Germany) is kindly acknowledged for the instrumental support.Abstract
Ultrasmall iron oxide nanoparticles (<10 nm) were loaded with cis-diamminetetrachloroplatinum (IV), a cisplatin (II) prodrug, and used as an efficient nanodelivery system in cell models.
To gain further insight into their behavior in ovarian cancer cells, the level of cellular incorporation
as well as the platination of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA were measured using inductively
coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) strategies. Quantitative Pt results revealed that after
24 h exposure to 20 µM Pt in the form of the Pt(IV)-loaded nanoparticles, approximately 10% of the
incorporated Pt was associated with nuclear DNA. This concentration increased up to 60% when cells
were left to stand in drug-free media for 3 h. These results indicated that the intracellular reducing
conditions permitted the slow release of cisplatin (II) from the cisplatin (IV)-loaded nanoparticles.
Similar results were obtained for the platination of mitochondrial DNA, which reached levels up
to 17,400 ± 75 ng Pt/ mg DNA when cells were left in drug-free media for 3 h, proving that this
organelle was also a target for the action of the released cisplatin (II). The time-dependent formation
of Pt-DNA adducts could be correlated with the time-dependent decrease in cell viability. Such a
decrease in cell viability was correlated with the induction of apoptosis as the main route of cell
death. The formation of autophagosomes, although observed upon exposure in treated cells, does
not seem to have played an important role as a means for cells to overcome nanoparticles’ toxicity.
Thus, the designed nanosystem demonstrated high cellular penetration and the “in situ” production
of the intracellularly active cisplatin (II), which is able to induce cell death, in a sustained manner.