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Artificial Red Blood Cells Constructed by Replacing Heme with Perfluorodecalin for Hypoxia‐Induced Radioresistance
Author(s) -
Yu Peng,
Han Xiaoxue,
Yin Lining,
Hui Kangyu,
Guo Yunfei,
Yuan Ahu,
Hu Yiqiao,
Wu Jinhui
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.125
0ISSN - 2366-3987
DOI - 10.1002/adtp.201900031
Subject(s) - radioresistance , hemoglobin , hypoxia (environmental) , cytotoxicity , chemistry , oxygen , red blood cell , tumor hypoxia , heme , cancer research , radiation therapy , pharmacology , medicine , surgery , in vitro , biochemistry , organic chemistry , enzyme
Radioresistance, a serious problem during radiotherapy (RT) caused by hypoxia, results in tumor relapse. Hemoglobin‐based oxygen carriers (HBOCs) which can deliver oxygen, offer a promising option to cancer patients with radioresistance. However, the potential autoxidative cytotoxicity and renal toxicity of heme in hemoglobin (Hb) hamper their clinical application. Thus, here, a nano red blood cell (nnRBC) is fabricated that replaces heme with perfluorodecalin (FDC), a hydrophobic, high oxygen carrying fluorocarbon, and coated with membranes of RBCs. For the first time, nnRBCs provide a new method for the delivery of FDC since it cannot be emulsified by any FDA approved emulsifiers. nnRBCs encapsulate FDC with 8000% (w/w) drug loading efficiency and show superior storage stability within seven days. After intravenous delivery, nnRBCs reverse tumor hypoxia effectively compared with RT treatment alone. Of note, the components of nnRBCs are all from organisms or safe substances that have been verified by human testing, which gives nnRBCs great potential to rapidly enter into clinical trials.