Investigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapy

There is a pressing need to develop novel platform cancer therapeutics that are efficient, reduce side effects, and are minimally invasive. One emerging platform is photodynamic therapy where light is used as an external stimulus to activate drugs at a target location, however, clinical applications...

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গ্রন্থ-পঞ্জীর বিবরন
প্রধান লেখক: Singh, K
অন্যান্য লেখক: Stride, E
বিন্যাস: গবেষণাপত্র
ভাষা:English
প্রকাশিত: 2024
বিষয়গুলি:
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author Singh, K
author2 Stride, E
author_facet Stride, E
Singh, K
author_sort Singh, K
collection OXFORD
description There is a pressing need to develop novel platform cancer therapeutics that are efficient, reduce side effects, and are minimally invasive. One emerging platform is photodynamic therapy where light is used as an external stimulus to activate drugs at a target location, however, clinical applications are limited due to poor light penetration. Previously, it has been shown that ultrasound with and without cavitation nuclei can be used to activate photodynamic drugs (sonodynamic therapy – SDT), however, the mechanism of this activation remains unclear. A proposed mechanism for SDT is that light produced by cavitation can activate photodynamic drugs at the target location resulting in reactive oxygen species (ROS) production (which leads to cell death). However, through temporal uncoupling of ultrasound application and compound administration in vitro, testing of ultrasound plus microbubble-only related cell death, and developing positive controls for cell permeabilization (sonoporation), this work shows that the mechanical effects of cavitation plays an important role in SDT-induced cell death in vitro and potentially explains the high levels of cell death observed when comparatively low concentrations of ROS are generated. This work also proposes a set of standard controls for SDT mechanistic studies.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e7c9dd29-2f67-47ab-92a2-78e157ee0da42024-11-28T10:50:41ZInvestigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapyThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:e7c9dd29-2f67-47ab-92a2-78e157ee0da4Life sciencesMedical sciencesBioengineeringEnglishHyrax Deposit2024Singh, KStride, ESchiller, JOppermann, UThere is a pressing need to develop novel platform cancer therapeutics that are efficient, reduce side effects, and are minimally invasive. One emerging platform is photodynamic therapy where light is used as an external stimulus to activate drugs at a target location, however, clinical applications are limited due to poor light penetration. Previously, it has been shown that ultrasound with and without cavitation nuclei can be used to activate photodynamic drugs (sonodynamic therapy – SDT), however, the mechanism of this activation remains unclear. A proposed mechanism for SDT is that light produced by cavitation can activate photodynamic drugs at the target location resulting in reactive oxygen species (ROS) production (which leads to cell death). However, through temporal uncoupling of ultrasound application and compound administration in vitro, testing of ultrasound plus microbubble-only related cell death, and developing positive controls for cell permeabilization (sonoporation), this work shows that the mechanical effects of cavitation plays an important role in SDT-induced cell death in vitro and potentially explains the high levels of cell death observed when comparatively low concentrations of ROS are generated. This work also proposes a set of standard controls for SDT mechanistic studies.
spellingShingle Life sciences
Medical sciences
Bioengineering
Singh, K
Investigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapy
title Investigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapy
title_full Investigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapy
title_fullStr Investigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapy
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapy
title_short Investigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapy
title_sort investigation of the mechanisms of sonodynamic therapy
topic Life sciences
Medical sciences
Bioengineering
work_keys_str_mv AT singhk investigationofthemechanismsofsonodynamictherapy