Blood–Brain Barrier-Penetrative Fluorescent Anticancer Agents Triggering Paraptosis and Ferroptosis for Glioblastoma Therapy
Article 2024 en
Authors
JW
Jiefei Wang
MC
Mingyue Cao
LH
Lulu Han
Abstract
1 min read
Currently used drugs for glioblastoma (GBM) treatments are ineffective, primarily due to the significant challenges posed by strong drug resistance, poor blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability, and the lack of tumor specificity. Here, we report two cationic fluorescent anticancer agents (TriPEX-ClO<sub>4</sub> and TriPEX-PF<sub>6</sub>) capable of BBB penetration for efficient GBM therapy via paraptosis and ferroptosis induction. These aggregation-induced emission (AIE)-active agents specifically target mitochondria, effectively triggering ATF4/JNK/Alix-regulated paraptosis and GPX4-mediated ferroptosis. Specifically, they rapidly induce substantial mitochondria-derived vacuolation, accompanied by reactive oxygen species generation, decreased mitochondrial membrane potential, and intracellular Ca<sup>2+</sup> overload, thereby disrupting metabolisms and inducing nonapoptotic cell death. In vivo imaging revealed that TriPEX-ClO<sub>4</sub> and TriPEX-PF<sub>6</sub> successfully traversed the BBB to target orthotopic glioma and initiated effective synergistic therapy postintravenous injection. Our AIE drugs emerged as the pioneering paraptosis inducers against drug-resistant GBM, significantly extending survival up to 40 days compared to Temozolomide (20 days) in drug-resistant GBM-bearing mice. These compelling results open up new venues for the development of fluorescent anticancer drugs and innovative treatments for brain diseases.
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