Cascade Therapy With Doxorubicin and Survivin-Targeted Tailored Nanoparticles: an Effective Alternative for Sensitization of Cancer Cells To Chemotherapy
Loading...
Date
Authors
Dağlıoğlu, Cenk
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
Yes
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Chemotherapy frequently involves combination treatment protocols to maximize tumor cell killing. Unfortunately these intensive chemotherapeutic regimes, often show disappointing results due to the development of drug resistance and higher nonspecific toxicity on normal tissues. In cancer treatment, it is critically important to minimize toxicity while preserving efficacy. We have previously addressed this issue and proposed a nanoparticle-based combination therapy involving both a molecularly targeted therapy and chemotherapeutic agent for neutralizing antiapoptotic survivin (BIRC5) to potentiate the efficacy of doxorubicin (DOX). Although the particles exhibited strong anticancer effect on the lung carcinoma A549 and the cervical carcinoma HeLa cells, there were lower-level therapeutic outcomes on the colon carcinoma HCT-116, the leukemia Jurkat and the pancreatic carcinoma MIA PaCa-2 cells. Since targeted therapies are one of the key approaches for overcoming drug resistance, tailoring the treatment of cancer cells with distinct characteristics is necessary to improve the therapeutic outcome of cancer therapy and to minimize potential pharmacokinetic interactions of drugs. In the light of this issue, this study examined whether a cascade therapy with low-dose DOX and survivin-targeted tailored nanoparticles is more effective at sensitizing HCT-116, Jurkat and MIA PaCa-2 cancer cells to DOX-chemotherapy than simultaneous combination therapy. The results demonstrated that the sequential therapy with the protocol comprising addition of the nanoparticles after incubation of cells with DOX clearly advanced the therapeutic outcome of related cancer cells, whereas the reverse protocol resulted in a reduction or delay in apoptosis, emphasizing the critical importance of formulating synergistic drug combinations in cancer therapy.
Description
PubMed: 30825555
Keywords
Nanoparticles, Chemoresistance, Doxorubicin, Survivin, Colon cancer, Pancreatic cancer, Leukemia, Caspase 3, Cell Survival, Survivin, Cell Cycle, Apoptosis, Ribonucleotides, Aminoimidazole Carboxamide, Drug Administration Schedule, Doxorubicin, Cell Line, Tumor, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols, Humans, Nanoparticles, Molecular Targeted Therapy
Fields of Science
0301 basic medicine, 03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q

OpenCitations Citation Count
8
Volume
561
Issue
Start Page
74
End Page
81
PlumX Metrics
Citations
CrossRef : 11
Scopus : 13
PubMed : 4
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 33
SCOPUS™ Citations
13
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
15
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Page Views
1063
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Downloads
422
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Google Scholar™


