Endogenous Catalytic Generation of O2 Bubbles for in Situ Ultrasound-Guided High Intensity Focused Ultrasound Ablation

Tianzhi Liu, Nan Zhang, Zhigang Wang, Meiying Wu, Yu Chen, Ming Ma, Hangrong Chen, Jianlin Shi*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

160 Scopus citations

Abstract

High intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) surgery generally suffers from poor precision and low efficiency in clinical application, especially for cancer therapy. Herein, a multiscale hybrid catalytic nanoreactor (catalase@MONs, abbreviated as C@M) has been developed as a tumor-sensitive contrast and synergistic agent (C&SA) for ultrasound-guided HIFU cancer surgery, by integrating dendritic-structured mesoporous organosilica nanoparticles (MONs) and catalase immobilized in the large open pore channels of MONs. Such a hybrid nanoreactor exhibited sensitive catalytic activity toward H2O2, facilitating the continuous O2 gas generation in a relatively mild manner even if incubated with 10 μM H2O2, which finally led to enhanced ablation in the tissue-mimicking PAA gel model after HIFU exposure mainly resulting from intensified cavitation effect. The C@M nanoparticles could be accumulated within the H2O2-enriched tumor region through enhanced permeability and retention effect, enabling durable contrast enhancement of ultrasound imaging, and highly efficient tumor ablation under relatively low power of HIFU exposure in vivo. Very different from the traditional perfluorocarbon-based C&SA, such an on-demand catalytic nanoreactor could realize the accurate positioning of tumor without HIFU prestimulation and efficient HIFU ablation with a much safer power output, which is highly desired in clinical HIFU application.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)9093-9102
Number of pages10
JournalACS Nano
Volume11
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 26 Sep 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • HIFU ablation
  • catalytic nanoreactor
  • hybrid nanostructure
  • mesoporous organosilica nanoparticles
  • tumor microenvironment

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