Publication:
Synergized photothermal therapy and magnetic field induced hyperthermia via bismuthene for lung cancer combinatorial treatment

Thumbnail Image

Program

School / College / Institute

College of Sciences
GRADUATE SCHOOL OF SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING
Research Center

KU Authors

Co-Authors

Yilmazer, Acelya
Gurcan, Cansu
Gazzi, Arianna
Ekim, Okan
Gokce, Cemile
Ceylan, Ahmet
Giro, Linda
Unal, Mehmet Altay
Ari, Fikret
Ekicibil, Ahmet

Publication Date

Language

Embargo Status

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Alternative Title

Abstract

Thanks to its intrinsic properties, two-dimensional (2D) bismuth (bismuthene) can serve as a multimodal nanotherapeutic agent for lung cancer acting through multiple mechanisms, including photothermal therapy (PTT), magnetic field-induced hyperthermia (MH), immunogenic cell death (ICD), and ferroptosis. To investigate this possibility, we synthesized bismuthene from the exfoliation of 3D layered bismuth, prepared through a facile method that we developed involving surfactant-assisted chemical reduction, with a specific focus on improving its magnetic properties. The bismuthene nanosheets showed high in vitro and in vivo anti-cancer activity after simultaneous light and magnetic field exposure in lung adenocarcinoma cells. Only when light and magnetic field are applied together, we can achieve the highest anti-cancer activity compared to the single treatment groups. We have further shown that ICD-dependent mechanisms were involved during this combinatorial treatment strategy. Beyond ICD, bismuthene-based PTT and MH also resulted in an increase in ferroptosis mechanisms both in vitro and in vivo, in addition to apoptotic pathways. Finally, hemolysis in human whole blood and a wide variety of assays in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells indicated that the bismuthene nanosheets were biocompatible and did not alter immune function. These results showed that bismuthene has the potential to serve as a biocompatible platform that can arm multiple therapeutic approaches against lung cancer.

Source

Publisher

Elsevier

Subject

Engineering, biomedical, Materials science, biomaterials

Citation

Has Part

Source

Materials Today Bio

Book Series Title

Edition

DOI

10.1016/j.mtbio.2023.100825

item.page.datauri

Link

Rights

Rights URL (CC Link)

Copyrights Note

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

3

Views

4

Downloads

View PlumX Details