scholarly journals Nanoparticle Delivery in Prostate Tumors Implanted in Mice Facilitated by Either Local or Whole-Body Heating

Fluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (8) ◽  
pp. 272
Author(s):  
Qimei Gu ◽  
Lance Dockery ◽  
Marie-Christine Daniel ◽  
Charles J. Bieberich ◽  
Ronghui Ma ◽  
...  

This work discusses in vivo experiments that were performed to evaluate whether local or whole-body heating to 40 °C reduced interstitial fluid pressures (IFPs) and enhanced nanoparticle delivery to subcutaneous PC3 human prostate cancer xenograft tumors in mice. After heating, 0.2 mL of a previously developed nanofluid containing gold nanoparticles (10 mg Au/mL) was injected via the tail vein. The induced whole-body hyperthermia led to increases in tumor and mouse body blood perfusion rates of more than 50% and 25%, respectively, while the increases were much smaller in the local heating group. In the whole-body hyperthermia groups, the IFP reduction from the baseline at the tumor center immediately after heating was found to be statistically significant when compared to the control group. The 1 h of local heating group showed IFP reductions at the tumor center, while the IFPs increased in the periphery of the tumor. The intratumoral gold nanoparticle accumulation was quantified using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Compared to the control group, 1 h or 4 h of experiencing whole-body hyperthermia resulted in an average increase of 51% or 67% in the gold deposition in tumors, respectively. In the 1 h of local heating group, the increase in the gold deposition was 34%. Our results suggest that 1 h of mild whole-body hyperthermia may be a cost-effective and readily implementable strategy for facilitating nanoparticle delivery to PC3 tumors in mice.

Author(s):  
Qimei Gu ◽  
Shuaishuai Liu ◽  
Arunendra Saha Ray ◽  
Stelios Florinas ◽  
Ronald James Christie ◽  
...  

Abstract In this study, we performed in vivo experiments on mice to evaluate whether whole-body hyperthermia enhances nanoparticle delivery to PC3 (prostatic cancer) tumors. PC3 xenograft tumors in immunodeficient mice were used in this study. The mice in the experimental group were subjected to whole-body hyperthermia by maintaining their body temperatures at 39–40 °C for 1 h. Interstitial fluid pressures (IFPs) in tumors were measured before heating, immediately after, and at 2 and 24 h postheating in both the experimental group and in a control group (without heating). A total of 0.2 ml of a newly developed nanofluid containing gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) was delivered via the tail vein in both groups. The micro-computed tomography (microCT) scanned images of the resected tumors were analyzed to visualize the nanoparticle distribution in the tumors and to quantify the total amount of nanoparticles delivered to the tumors. Statistically significant IFP reductions of 45% right after heating, 47% 2 h after heating, and 52% 24 h after heating were observed in the experimental group. Analyses of microCT scans of the resected tumors illustrated that nanoparticles were more concentrated near the tumor periphery rather than at the tumor center. The 1-h whole-body hyperthermia treatment resulted in more nanoparticles present in the tumor central region than that in the control group. The mass index calculated from the microCT scans suggested overall 42% more nanoparticle delivery in the experimental group than that in the control group. We conclude that 1-h mild whole-body hyperthermia leads to sustained reduction in tumoral IFPs and significantly increases the total amount of targeted gold nanoparticle deposition in PC3 tumors. The present study suggests that mild whole-body hyperthermia is a promising approach for enhancing targeted drug delivery to tumors.


Circulation ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (Suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Junya Suzuki ◽  
Yuuki Shimizu ◽  
Kazuhito Tsuzuki ◽  
Zhongyue Pu ◽  
Shukuro Yamaguchi ◽  
...  

Introduction: Implantation of adipose-derived regenerative cells (ADRC) is a promising novel strategy to augment angiogenesis and blood perfusion recovery in ischemic diseases with no other therapeutic option. However, there is a clinical concern underlying therapeutic angiogenesis that implantation of ADRC may promote tumor growth and metastasis via remote angiogenesis. Accordingly, we tested whether therapeutic angiogenesis with ADRC against hindlimb ischemia (HLI) would affect remote tumor growth and angiogenesis in a tumor-bearing mouse ischemic hindlimb model. Methods and results: B16F10-Luc (murine melanoma cells expressing luciferase, 1x106 cells/animal) were implanted to C57BL/6J mice’s (male, 8-10 weeks old, n=10) back. Mice were subjected to unilateral HLI surgery one day after tumor implantation. Then, mice were randomly assigned to the control group or the ADRC group (n=5 for each). ADRC (1x106 cells/animal) or PBS were implanted/injected into ischemic hindlimb muscles one day after the surgery. Blood perfusion recovery in HLI by laser Doppler perfusion imaging system and tumor size by a caliper were measured every week up to 21 days after surgery. At POD 21, tumor weight and luciferase activity in primary tumors obtained by in vivo bioluminescence imaging system were also evaluated. Immunohistochemistry by CD31 or LYVE1 staining was performed to detect feeder arteries or outflow lymphatic vessels in tumors. The results demonstrated that better blood perfusion recovery and more capillary density in HLI was observed in the ADRC group than in the control group (p<0.05, respectively). However, there were no significant differences in terms of tumor volume (p=0.95), tumor weight (p=0.88) and luciferase activity of primary tumor (p=0.92) between those two groups. No sign of distant metastasis was detected by macroscopic and pathological examination, and by in vivo bioluminescence imaging system in both groups. Further study also revealed that capillary density of peritumoral blood vessels or lymphatic vessels was not augmented by ADRC implantation into remote HLI. Conclusions: Our data indicated that therapeutic angiogenesis with ADRC implantation against HLI did not promote remote tumor growth, angiogenesis and metastasis.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Wang ◽  
Tian Liu ◽  
Jun-fei Wang ◽  
Bao-yi Liu ◽  
Jin-xiang Wu ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Asthma is a common respiratory disease characterized by chronic airway inflammation. As a novel inflammatory mediator, follistatin-like protein 1 (FSTL1) can activate immune reaction, suggesting that it may contribute to inflammatory disorders such as asthma. Besides, there are growing evidences that nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat protein 3 (NLRP3) / Interleukin (IL)-1β axis participates in asthma. In this study, we investigated the role of FSTL1 in allergic airway inflammation and its underlying mechanism of activating NLRP3 inflammasome. Methods Circulating FSTL1 and IL-1β levels were quantified in serum of asthmatic patients and controls. Whole-body ablation Fstl1 heterozygous mice (Fstl1 +/- ) and control group were assessed after the experimental treatment. The effects of FSTL1 on NLRP3 inflammasome were also tested in primary macrophages of mice in vitro. Results The concentration of FSTL1 and IL-1β in serum of asthmatic patients were elevated compared with controls and were positively correlated. FSTL1 deficiency ameliorated infiltration of inflammatory cells,corresponding pathological changes,cytokine responses (IL-1β, IL-5,IL-13), mucous hypersecretion and hyper-responsiveness of airway after Ovalbumin (OVA) exposure in the mouse model. Additionally, inhibition of NLRP3 with MCC950 attenuated FSTL1-induced activation of NLRP3 inflammasome and airway inflammation in vivo and vitro. Conclusions Our data showed that FSTL1 played an important role in allergic airway inflammation by activating NLRP3 inflammasome, providing the possibility that FSTL1 could be applied as a therapeutic strategy on asthma.


1991 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 525-530 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong-Nian Shen ◽  
Ned B Hornback ◽  
Homayoon Shidnia ◽  
Bo Wu ◽  
Li Lu ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 205 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-278
Author(s):  
Yueh-Tsu King ◽  
Chih-Sheng Lin ◽  
Jyh-Hung Lin ◽  
Wen-Chuan Lee

SUMMARY Molecular mechanisms of whole-body thermotolerance (WBT) in mammals have not been investigated thoroughly. The purpose of this study was to assess the induction of the 70 kDa heat shock protein (HSP70) and antioxidant enzyme activity in animal WBT, which was induced by whole-body hyperthermia (WBH) in mice. As a preconditioning treatment, WBH was applied to mice to induce WBT. Synthesis of inducible HSP70 (HSP70i) and quantification of its increased level in liver were investigated by one- and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. HSP70i synthesis in mice liver was induced by non-lethal WBH (41°C, 30 min). When compared to control animals, the level of liver HSP70i increased substantially (by 3.6-fold; P&lt;0.0001). When exposed to 30 min of hyperthermia preconditioning, and after recovery for 48 h, the survival rate was 88.2 %, which was significantly higher than that of the control group (37.5 %; P&lt;0.01). Moreover, the survival rate of animals subjected to preconditioning for 15 min was 72.2 %, which was also significantly higher than that of the control group (P&lt;0.05). In contrast, the survival rate of animals subjected to preconditioning for 45 min was 63.5 %, which was not different from the control group. Nonetheless, the protection index of the group subjected to 15 min and 30 min of preconditioning was 1.93 and 2.37, respectively. Furthermore, to assess their contributions to WBT, the activities of antioxidant enzymes were also measured. After 48 h of recovery in preconditioned animals, hepatic antioxidant enzyme activities, including superoxide dismutase, catalase and glutathione peroxidase, had not changed significantly. To study the molecular mechanism of WBT, we successfully developed a mouse model and suggest that, rather than the activities of antioxidant enzymes, it is HSP70i that has a role to help animals survive during severe heat stress.


Circulation ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 130 (suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Takuya Mizukami ◽  
Yoshitaka Iso ◽  
Haruka Usui ◽  
Chisato Sato ◽  
Masahiro Sasai ◽  
...  

Introduction: Accumulating evidence from animal studies shows that the administration of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from bone marrow ameliorates tissue damage after ischemic injury. However, the inability to effectively graft culture-expanded stem cells to diseased or injured tissues remains a challenge for cell therapy. Erythropoietin (Epo) is an erythropoiesis-stimulating cytokine and protects erythroid progenitors from cell death. Epo receptor was identified in MSCs, but the action of Epo/Epo receptor signaling is not determined. In the present study we investigated whether Epo enhanced the survival and pro-angiogenic potential in the MCSs in both culture and animal experiments. Methods and Results: Epo receptor was expressed on MSCs isolated from bone marrow in GFP-transgenic rats. In culture study, the Epo treatment (80IU/ml) significantly propagated the MSCs compared with the controls (2-fold increase, p<0.05). Quantitative RT-PCR analysis demonstrated that Epo significantly enhanced the expressions of basic-fibroblast growth factor and stromal cell-derived factor-1 in the cultured MSCs. In vivo, the GFP-MSCs preconditioned with and without Epo (80IU/ml) for 48 hours were locally administered to rat hindlimb ischemia model (n=11 in each group). Priming with Epo significantly increased the MSC engraftment in perivascular area of the injured muscle at day 3 after the implantation more than without Epo (1.5±1.3 vs. 3.0±2.1, p<0.05). The MSCs preconditioned with Epo significantly promoted blood perfusion documented by laser Doppler and capillary growth in histological study compared with the control group at day 14 (p<0.05, respectively). In addition to promoting neovascularization, the MSCs with Epo significantly inhibited macrophage infiltration in perivascular are (p<0.05 vs. the control). Conclusions: Epo induced the proliferative activity and enhanced the production of angiogenic cytokines in the cultured MSCs from bone marrow. In vivo study demonstrated that the short-term priming with Epo promoted the cellular engraftment and neovascularization in the MSC therapy for ischemic limb muscle. MSC implantation combined with Epo may be a novel and feasible strategy in therapeutic angiogeneis.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1720-1720
Author(s):  
Julia Schüler ◽  
Dagmar Wider ◽  
Dietmar Pfeifer ◽  
Martin Wagner ◽  
Heinz-Herbert Fiebig ◽  
...  

Abstract For a better understanding of myeloma disease and biology, the establishment of reproducible in vivo models is pursued worldwide. We have established a cell linebased, disseminated myeloma model in NOD/SCID-IL2-receptor-gamma-chain−/− (IL2−/−) mice. In the current study, this model was validated in various treatment groups, using 1. bortezomib (0.7mg/kg/day (d); d0, d4, d11), 2. sorafenib (200mg/kg/d; d0–11), 3. dexamethasone (3mg/kg/d, d0–4 + 7–11), in comparison with 4. a control group. L363 cells were injected intratibialy (it) into IL2−/− mice and respective therapies were started 7 days after L363-it-injection (d0). Tumor growth was monitored with daily monitoring of MM symptoms, fluorescence-based in vivo imaging (FI) performed every 2. week and flow-cytometry (FACS; detection of human HLA−A, B, C + CD138) performed once weekly by sacrificing 2 mice per group and analyzing bone marrow (BM), spleen, peripheral blood (PB) and liver. Based on the FACS data, tumor inhibition was calculated as the median percentage of MM cells at respective compartments of the test- vs. control-group multiplied by 100 (optimal test/control (T/C) in %). Furthermore, hollow bones of the injected mice were retrieved when mice were sacrificed for FACS analyses, cells flushed out and MM cells purified by MACS microbeads. Total RNA was isolated from these cells and gene expression profiles will be analyzed using the HG-U133 Plus 2.0 array (Affymetrix) and the Expressionist software (Genedata AG, Basel). L363 engrafted reliably (take rate=100%) at the injection site and in distant organs, such as BM (100%), spleen (38%) and rarely liver (8%). Control mice developed MM symptoms, such as hind limb pareses, weight loss and osteolyses. L363 cells were detected by FACS and FI, not only at injection sites, but also in the BM, hollow bones and spleen. Primary tumor development was markedly reduced by sorafenib (optimal T/C of 23% on d14), as well as with dexamethasone and bortezomib, albeit to a much lesser extend (optimal T/C: 81% + 62% on d14, respectively). BM metastases were also significantly reduced by sorafenib with an optimal T/C value of 67% on d28. Dexamethasone and bortezomib, the latter possibly due to subclinical doses (determined after titration and toxicity experiments), had no relevant influence on BM metastases suppression (97% + 100% optimal T/C on d28, respectively). Thus, L363 engraftment into IL2−/− is a valuable in vivo model for MM which exhibits high reproducibility, take- and metastases-rates and closely mimics the clinical situation. Collection of whole-body FI data proved to be a time- and animal-saving analysis that allows to closely monitor MM growth. Further investigations will validate the very promising antitumor activity of sorafenib and evaluate the potentially synergistic effect of bortezomib and sorafenib. Amongst others, a detailed characterization of the antitumor activity of both compounds will be provided by the gene expression profile of L363 cells isolated from untreated as well as treated mice. The evaluation of new therapeutic approaches in comparison to standard agents was thus successfully conducted, suggesting that our model serves as a valuable tool in the development of new anticancer strategies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Chen ◽  
Dandan Sheng ◽  
Ting Ying ◽  
Haojun Zhao ◽  
Jian Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Tendon regeneration is still a great challenge due to its avascular structure and low self-renewal capability. The nitric oxide (NO) therapy emerges as a promising treatment for inducing the regeneration of injured tendon by angiogenesis. Here, in this study, a system that NO-loaded metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) encapsulated in polycaprolactone (PCL)/gelatin (Gel) aligned coaxial scaffolds (NMPGA) is designed and prepared for tendon repair. In this system, NO is able to be released in vitro at a slow and stable average speed of 1.67 nM h−1 as long as 15 d without a burst release stage in the initial 48 h. Furthermore, NMPGA can not only improve the tubular formation capability of endothelial cells in vitro but also obviously increase the blood perfusion near the injured tendon in vivo, leading to accelerating the maturity of collagen and recovery of biomechanical strength of the regenerated tendon tissue. As a NO-loaded MOFs therapeutic system, NMPGA can promote tendon regeneration in a shorter healing period with better biomechanical properties in comparison with control group by angiogenesis. Therefore, this study not only provides a promising scaffold for tendon regeneration, but also paves a new way to develop a NO-based therapy for biomedical application in the future.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 2141-2141
Author(s):  
Julia Schüler ◽  
Kerstin Klingner ◽  
Katja Zirlik ◽  
Heinz-Herbert Fiebig ◽  
Joachim Böhm

Abstract Abstract 2141 Acute myeloid leukemia (AML), one of the most common leukemia in adults, is characterized by the accumulation of abnormal white blood cells in the bone marrow. Even with modern advances in therapeutics and molecular diagnostics, the majority of AML patients die from their disease. Angiogenesis contributes to the development of hematologic malignancies, although its role has not been as clearly defined in hematologic malignancies as in solid tumors. In the present study we have determined antitumoral activity of two well-known inhibitors of angiogenesis. Sorafenib, a small molecule inhibitor affecting inter alia the VEGF pathway (100mg/kg/day (d); applied 12 consecutive days) and Cetuximab, a chimeric antibody against human EGFR (30 mg/kg/d; applied once weekly for 3 weeks) were evaluated in comparison to Etoposide, a topoisomerase II inhibitor (24mg/kg/day; applied 3 consecutive days) as a well established compound in AML treatment regimens in comparison with a control group. Equal parts of HL-60 cells were injected intravenously and into the peritoneal cavity of NOD/SCID mice and respective therapies were started 14 days after implantation. Tumor growth was monitored by a) daily monitoring of AML symptoms, and b) weekly fluorescence-based in vivo imaging (FI) using a Alexa750-labeled anti-human CD45 antibody and c) verification of the FI data by histological examination of bone marrow and spleen at the end of the study. Tumor inhibition was calculated as the proportional reduction of mean AML cell infiltration at the respective compartment of the test- compared to the control-group (in %). HL-60 cells engrafted predominantly in bone marrow (BM; take rate = 100%), but were as well detectable in the spleen (30%). At the respective doses and schedules the examined compounds were well tolerated in tumor-bearing mice. No acute toxicity could be observed and maximal body weight loss was below 15%. Tumor development was clearly reduced by Cetuximab (reduction of 53% vs control), albeit to a lesser extend then Sorafenib (reduction of 99% vs control), which induced a complete remission within the treatment period. Treatment of Etoposide induced no markable tumor growth inhibition (reduction of 10% vs control). Thus, HL-60 cells engrafted in NOD/SCID mice representing a valuable in vivo model for AML which exhibits high reproducibility and take-rates in relevant compartments closely mimicking the clinical situation. Collection of whole-body FI data proved to be a time- and animal-saving analysis that allows to closely monitor AML growth. With regard to the demographic development, AML will be more and more a disease of the elderly. Thus, development of new therapeutic options compared to high-dose chemotherapy will be highly required. As the VEGF and EGFR pathways are closely related, further investigations will include the evaluation of potentially synergistic effects in combination of Sorafenib with Cetuximab in human disseminated AML xenograft models. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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