A “dual-key-and-lock” DNA nanodevice enables spatially controlled multimodal imaging and combined cancer therapy

Abstract

DNA-based theragnostic platforms have attracted more and more attention, while their applications are still impeded by nonspecific interference and insufficient therapeutic efficacy. Herein, we fabricate an integrated “dual-key-and-lock” DNA nanodevice (DKL-DND) which is composed of the inner Dox/Hairpin/Aptazyme-Au@Ag@Au probes and the outer metal–organic frameworks loaded with Fuel strand. Once internalized into human breast cancer cells (MCF-7), the DKL-DND is activated by cascaded endogenous stimuli (acidic pH in the lysosome and high expression of ATP in the cytoplasm), leading to spatially controlled optical/magnetic resonance multimodal imaging and gene/chemo/small molecule combined cancer therapy. By engineering pH and ATP-responsive units as cascaded locks on the DKL-DND, the operating status of the nanodevice and accessibility of encapsulated anti-tumour drugs can be precisely regulated in the specified physiological states, avoiding the premature activation and release during assembly and delivery. Both in vitro and in vivo assessments demonstrate that the DKL-DND with excellent stimuli-responsive ability, biocompatibility, stability and accumulation behaviour was capable of simultaneously affording accurate tumour diagnosis and efficient tumour growth inhibition. This integrated DKL-DND exhibits great promise in constructing self-adaptive nanodevices for multimodal imaging-guided combination therapy.

Graphical abstract: A “dual-key-and-lock” DNA nanodevice enables spatially controlled multimodal imaging and combined cancer therapy

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
04 Mar 2024
Accepted
15 Jun 2024
First published
25 Jun 2024
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2024, Advance Article

A “dual-key-and-lock” DNA nanodevice enables spatially controlled multimodal imaging and combined cancer therapy

S. Yue, J. Zhan, X. Xu, J. Xu, S. Bi and J. Zhu, Chem. Sci., 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4SC01493F

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