Vanadium Dioxide Nanocoating Induces Tumor Cell Death through Mitochondrial Electron Transport Chain Interruption

Li, J; Jiang, M; Zhou, H; Jin, P; Cheung, KMC; Chu, PK; Yeung, KWK

HERO ID

6308055

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2019

Language

English

PMID

31565366

HERO ID 6308055
In Press No
Year 2019
Title Vanadium Dioxide Nanocoating Induces Tumor Cell Death through Mitochondrial Electron Transport Chain Interruption
Authors Li, J; Jiang, M; Zhou, H; Jin, P; Cheung, KMC; Chu, PK; Yeung, KWK
Volume 3
Issue 3
Page Numbers 1800058
Abstract A biomaterials surface enabling the induction of tumor cell death is particularly desirable for implantable biomedical devices that directly contact tumor tissues. However, this specific antitumor feature is rarely found. Consequently, an antitumor-cell nanocoating comprised of vanadium dioxide (VO2) prepared by customized reactive magnetron sputtering has been proposed, and its antitumor-growth capability has been demonstrated using human cholangiocarcinoma cells. The results reveal that the VO2 nanocoating is able to interrupt the mitochondrial electron transport chain and then elevate the intracellular reactive oxygen species levels, leading to the collapse of the mitochondrial membrane potential and the destruction of cell redox homeostasis. Indeed, this chain reaction can effectively trigger oxidative damage in the cholangiocarcinoma cells. Additionally, this study has provided new insights into designing a tumor-cell-inhibited biomaterial surface, which is modulated by the mechanism of mitochondria-targeting tumor cell death.
Doi 10.1002/gch2.201800058
Pmid 31565366
Wosid WOS:000460185600002
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Journal: Global challenges (Hoboken, NJ) ISSN: 2056-6646
Is Public Yes
Language Text English