posted on 2020-09-24, 16:34authored byFederica De Castro, Viviana Vergaro, Michele Benedetti, Francesca Baldassarre, Laura Del Coco, Maria Michela Dell’Anna, Piero Mastrorilli, Francesco Paolo Fanizzi, Giuseppe Ciccarella
Nanoparticle-based
drug delivery systems for cancer therapy offer
a great promising opportunity as they specifically target cancer cells,
also increasing the bioavailability of anticancer drugs characterized
by low water solubility. Platicur, [Pt(cur) (NH3)2](NO3), is a cis-diamine–platinum(II)
complex linked to curcumin. In this work, an ultrasonication method,
coupled with layer by layer technology, allows us to obtain highly
aqueous stable Platicur nanocolloids of about 100 nm. The visible
light-activated Platicur nanocolloids showed an increased drug release
and antitumor activity on HeLa cells, with respect to Platicur nanocolloids
in darkness. This occurrence could give very interesting insight into
selective activation of the nanodelivered Pt(II) complex and possible
side-effect lowering. For the first time, the metabolic effects of
Platicur nanocolloid photoactivation, in the HeLa cell line, have
been investigated using an NMR-based metabolomics approach coupled
with statistical multivariate data analysis. The reported results
highlight specific metabolic differences between photoactivated and
non-photoactivated Platicur NC-treated HeLa cancer cells.