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Dive into the research topics where Xiaomeng Guo is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiaomeng Guo.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2014

Dual-core@shell-structured Fe3O4–NaYF4@TiO2 nanocomposites as a magnetic targeting drug carrier for bioimaging and combined chemo-sonodynamic therapy

Song Shen; Xiaomeng Guo; Lin Wu; Meng Wang; Xinshi Wang; Fenfen Kong; Haijun Shen; Meng Xie; Yanru Ge; Yi Jin

Multifunctional dual-core@shell (Fe3O4-NaYF4@TiO2) nanocomposite (DCSNC) loaded with doxorubicin (DOX) have been developed for synergetic sonodynamic cancer chemotherapy, where titanium dioxide (TiO2) is employed as a sonosensitizer for sonodynamic therapy (SDT) of the tumor in deep tissues, and NaYF4 is used for upconversion luminescence (UCL) imaging. After being coated with hyaluronic acid (HA), the nanocomposites exhibit a time dependent cellular uptake and an excellent nucleus targeting effect in KB and MCF-7 cells. The ultrasound of HA-DCSNCs obviously enhances the apoptosis rate of MCF-7 cells. A greater tumor inhibition rate is observed when the tumor-bearing mice are treated with combined therapy (88.36%) compared with chemotherapy (28.36%) or sonodynamic therapy (38.91%) alone, indicating the potential of sonodynamic chemotherapy for cancer treatment.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Appropriate Size of Magnetic Nanoparticles for Various Bioapplications in Cancer Diagnostics and Therapy

Xiaomeng Guo; Zhe Wu; Wei Li; Zuhua Wang; Qingpo Li; Fenfen Kong; Hanbo Zhang; Xiuliang Zhu; Yiping P. Du; Yi Jin; Yong-Zhong Du; Jian You

The development of multifunctional nanoparticles has attracted increasing attention. The versatility of nanoparticles largely depends on their physiochemical properties (especially size). However, the optimized size range may be different for the bioapplications of each function associated with multifunctional nanoparticles. It is important to investigate every optimized size range to ascertain which size enables the best function of the nanoparticles before deciding their final size. In this work, we synthesized a series of monodisperse Fe3O4 nanoparticles with identical surface properties ranging in size from 60 to 310 nm and systematically investigated their biobehavior and application. Our data indicate that compared to their large counterparts, small Fe3O4 nanoparticles exhibited greater cellular internalization and deeper penetration into multicellular spheroids, thus enabling a higher photothermal ablation efficacy in vitro. Interestingly, larger Fe3O4 nanoparticles showed greater accumulation in tumors, thereby inducing more efficient tumor growth inhibition. In addition, 120 nm may be the optimal diameter of Fe3O4 nanoparticles for magnetic resonance imaging and photoacoustic tomography in vitro. However, more efficient in vivo imaging mediated by Fe3O4 nanoparticles will predominantly depend on their high accumulation. Our work presents a different appropriate size range for each biofunction of Fe3O4 nanoparticles, which could be a valuable reference for future nanoparticle design.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Gold Nanospheres-Stabilized Indocyanine Green as a Synchronous Photodynamic–Photothermal Therapy Platform That Inhibits Tumor Growth and Metastasis

Wei Li; Hanbo Zhang; Xiaomeng Guo; Zuhua Wang; Fenfen Kong; Lihua Luo; Qingpo Li; Chunqi Zhu; Jie Yang; Yan Lou; Yong-Zhong Du; Jian You

Both photothermal therapy (PTT) and photodynamic therapy (PDT) are phototherapeutic approaches, which have been widely investigated for cancer therapy mediated by an external light source. Here, a nanosystem presenting the synchronous PTT and PDT effect realized through one-step near-infrared (NIR) light irradiation is reported. This system was fabricated by conjugating indocyanine green (ICG) on hollow gold nanospheres (HAuNS) using branched-polyethylenimine (PEI, MW = 10 kDa) as optimal linker, which provided a high ICG payload as well as a covering layer with suitable thickness on HAuNS to maintain ICG fluorescence and reactive oxygen species (ROS) productivity. The resulting system (ICG-PEI-HAuNS) had the molar ratio of ICG:PEI:Au = 3:0.33:5. Compared with free ICG, ICG-PEI-HAuNS exhibited dramatically enhanced stability of ICG molecules and greater intratumoral accumulation. The conjugation of ICG caused significantly higher plasmon absorption of ICG-PEI-HAuNS in the NIR region compared with HAuNS alone, inducing remarkably enhanced photothermal conversion efficiency and synchronous photodynamic effect under NIR light irradiation. Interestingly, compared with PTT or PDT alone, synchronous PTT and PDT produced by ICG-PEI-HAuNS upon NIR light irradiation induced significantly stronger antitumor and metastasis inhibition effects both in vitro and in vivo, which might be a promising strategy for cancer treatment.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2013

The role of endosome evasion bypass in the reversal of multidrug resistance by lipid/nanoparticle assemblies

Zhen Li; Bo Li; Meng Wang; Meng Xie; Haijun Shen; Song Shen; Xinshi Wang; Xiaomeng Guo; Mingfei Yao; Yi Jin

In the present study, we describe novel lipid/nanoparticle assemblies (LNPs), consisting of a dimethyldidodecylammonium bromide (DMAB) modified poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticle core wrapped in a 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) shell. The results of cell cytotoxicity and cellular uptake experiments with doxorubicin (DOX)-loaded LNPs demonstrated that these core-shell polymeric assemblies had the potential to reverse multidrug resistance (MDR). Understanding the processes involved in the endosome evasion is critical for developing nano-drug delivery systems. LNPs encapsuling calcein as a model drug were prepared to explore the intracellular processing. The endocytic process study revealed that the LNPs firstly interacted with the cell membrane followed by turning into endosomes and then accumulated in the lysosome without the drug being degraded and assimilated, and the released drug diffused to the nucleus ultimately. The assemblies were internalized into the cells via lipid raft/caveolae (which is localized by Pgp) mediated endocytosis using a Flow cytometry system (FACS) and endocytic inhibitors. These results suggested that these definite polymeric assemblies might reverse multidrug resistance, mainly via lysosome bypassing and have potential to evade Pgp function. This study presents a foundation for exploring the mechanism of reversing multidrug resistance by nanoparticle assemblies and designing more effective nano-drug carries.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

External Magnetic Field-Enhanced Chemo-Photothermal Combination Tumor Therapy via Iron Oxide Nanoparticles

Xiaomeng Guo; Wei Li; Lihua Luo; Zuhua Wang; Qingpo Li; Fenfen Kong; Hanbo Zhang; Jie Yang; Chunqi Zhu; Yong-Zhong Du; Jian You

The development of multifunctional nanoplatforms based on magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) has attracted increasing attention. MNPs especially exhibit excellent responsiveness under the guidance of an external magnetic field (MF), resulting in tumor-specific, targeted delivery. The behavior and magnetic-targeting efficiency of MNPs largely depend on their physiochemical properties, especially the particle size; however, the optimal size range may vary across the multiple bioapplications associated with multifunctional nanoparticles. The optimal size range of nanoparticles for external MF-mediated targeted delivery has rarely been reported. In this work, we synthesized a series of monodisperse Fe3O4 nanoparticles with identical surface properties ranging in size from 10 to 310 nm, and we systematically investigated their behavior and MF-assisted antitumor efficacy. Our data indicated that smaller Fe3O4 nanoparticles exhibited greater cellular internalization, while larger Fe3O4 nanoparticles showed greater tumor accumulation. Larger Fe3O4 nanoparticles exhibited stronger magnetic responsiveness both in vitro and in vivo, which could be used to further induce increased accumulation of nanoparticles and their payload (e.g., doxorubicin) into the tumor site under the guidance of an external MF. Our work demonstrated that larger Fe3O4 nanoparticles, with a diameter of up to 310 nm, exhibited the best magnetic-targeting efficiency mediated by an external MF and the strongest antitumor efficacy from combination photothermal-chemotherapy. Our results could serve as a valuable reference for the future design of MNPs and their targeted delivery via the modulation of an external MF.


Drug Delivery | 2018

Synchronous delivery of oxygen and photosensitizer for alleviation of hypoxia tumor microenvironment and dramatically enhanced photodynamic therapy

Xiaomeng Guo; Jiaxin Qu; Chunqi Zhu; Wei Li; Lihua Luo; Jie Yang; Xiaoyi Yin; Qingpo Li; Yong-Zhong Du; Dawei Chen; Yunqing Qiu; Yan Lou; Jian You

Abstract Photosensitizer, proper laser irradiation, and oxygen are essential components for effective photodynamic therapy (PDT) in clinical cancer therapy. However, native hypoxic tumoral microenvironment is a major barrier hindering photodynamic reactions in vivo. Thus, we have prepared biocompatible liposomes by loading complexes of oxygen-carrier (hemoglobin, Hb) and photosensitizer (indocyanine green, ICG) for enhanced PDT against hypoxic tumor. Ideal oxygen donor Hb, which is an oxygen-carried protein in red blood cells, makes such liposome which provide stable oxygen supply. ICG, as a photosensitizer, could transfer energy from lasers to oxygen to generate cytotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) for treatment. The liposomes loading ICG and Hb (LIH) exhibited efficient tumor homing upon intravenous injection. As revealed by T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging and immunohistochemical analysis, the intratumoral hypoxia was greatly alleviated, and the level of hypoxia inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in tumor was obviously down-regulated. A weak PDT efficiency was found in cells incubated in simulated hypoxia condition in vitro, while PDT effect was dramatically enhanced in LIH treated hypoxia cells under near-infrared (NIR) laser, which was mainly attributed to massive generation of ROS with sufficient oxygen supply. ROS trigger oxidative damage of tumors and induce complete suppression of tumor growth and 100% survival rate of mice, which were also in good health condition. Our work highlights a liposome-based nanomedicine that could effectively deliver oxygen to tumor and alleviate tumor hypoxia state, inducing greatly improved efficacy compared to conventional cancer PDT and demonstrates the promise of modulating unfavorable tumor microenvironment with nanotechnology to overcome limitations of cancer therapies.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Specifically increased paclitaxel release in tumor and synergetic therapy by a hyaluronic acid-tocopherol nanomicelle

Hanbo Zhang; Wei Li; Xiaomeng Guo; Fenfen Kong; Zuhua Wang; Chunqi Zhu; Lihua Luo; Qingpo Li; Jie Yang; Yong-Zhong Du; Jian You

Recently, interest in tumor-targeted and site-specific drug release from nanoparticles as a means of drug delivery has increased. In this study, we report a smart nanosized micelle formed by hyaluronic acid (HA) conjugated with d-α-tocopherol succinate (TOS) using a disulfide bond as the linker (HA-SS-TOS, HSST). HSST micelles can specifically bind to the CD44 receptors that are overexpressed by cancer cells. The high levels of glutathione (GSH) in tumor cells selectively break the disulfide bond linker. This effect results in the synchronous release of the payload and a TOS fragment. These two components subsequently demonstrate synergetic anticancer activity. First, we demonstrate that drug release from HSST occurs rapidly in physiological high redox conditions and inside cancer cells. Significant GSH-triggered drug release was also observed in vivo. Furthermore, an in vivo biodistribution study indicated that the HSST micelles efficiently accumulated at the tumor sites, primarily due to an enhanced permeability and retention effect and the efficient binding to the cancer cells that overexpressed the CD44 receptor. Interestingly, the synchronous release of paclitaxel (PTX) and the TOS fragment from the PTX-loaded HSST caused synergetic tumor cell killing and tumor growth inhibition. Our work presents a useful candidate for a drug delivery system that can specifically accumulate at tumor tissue, selectively release its payload and a TOS fragment, and thus display a synergetic anticancer effect.


Small | 2017

Specific Photothermal Ablation Therapy of Endometriosis by Targeting Delivery of Gold Nanospheres

Xiaomeng Guo; Wei Li; Jialin Zhou; Wanqing Hou; Xue Wen; Hanbo Zhang; Fenfen Kong; Lihua Luo; Qingpo Li; Yong-Zhong Du; Jian You

Endometriosis is difficult to treat since the side effects of the current therapeutic method and the high recurrence rate; thus, newer and safer therapeutic approaches are urgently needed. This work investigates the enhanced permeability and retention effect of CdTe quantum dots (QDs) and hollow gold nanospheres (HAuNS) in endometriosis to increase the delivery of HAuNS into lesion cells. The surface of HAuNS is successfully conjugated with a TNYL peptide that has specific affinity for the EphB4 receptor, which is a member of the Eph family of receptor tyrosine kinases. It is found that the EphB4 receptor is overexpressed in endometriosis lesions. The data indicate that both QDs and HAuNS can efficiently accumulate in endometriotic lesions through permeable vessels and the TNYL-conjugated HAuNS (TNYL-HAuNS) accumulate more via the interaction with EphB4. The specific photothermal ablation therapy based on TNYL-HAuNS significantly inhibits the growth of the endometriotic volume and induces the atrophy and degeneration of ectopic endometrium with no detectable toxicity to the normal organs. The level of TNF-α and estradiol also significantly decreases in the endometriotic lesions, indicating that the treatment enables a recovery from hormonal imbalance and inflammatory injury. This work can be a valuable reference for future endometriosis therapy.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2018

Sustained release of anti-PD-1 peptide for perdurable immunotherapy together with photothermal ablation against primary and distant tumors

Lihua Luo; Jie Yang; Chunqi Zhu; Mengshi Jiang; Xiaomeng Guo; Wei Li; Xiaoyi Yin; Hang Yin; Bin Qin; Xiaoling Yuan; Qingpo Li; Yong-Zhong Du; Jian You

ABSTRACT Immune checkpoint PD‐1/PD‐L1 blockade has emerged as a successful immunotherapy strategy for treating several types of malignant tumors. A constant and proper drug concentration during the treatment is important because the long‐term activation of the immune system is urgently needed to perdurably recognize and attack cancer cells for a better therapeutic effect with minimum side effects. However, practically few related studies have been reported to date. In this study, we constructed a therapeutic strategy combining PD‐1 blocking with photothermal ablation for malignant tumors by co‐encapsulating anti‐PD‐1 peptide (APP) and hollow gold nanoshell (HAuNS) into biodegradable Poly (d, l‐lactic‐co‐glycolide) nanoparticles (APP‐ and HAuNS‐loaded PLGA nanoparticles, AA@PN). Slow and continuous release of APP from AA@PN could be obtained from 0 to 40days, and this release was easily accelerated by illumination with a near‐infrared (NIR) laser. A clear killing effect on distant tumor cells was observed after treatment of the co‐culture system of PMBCs and tumor cells with AA@PN plus an NIR laser, reflecting the activated immune response. AA@PN followed by multiple irradiations with an NIR laser showed the strongest antitumor effect, with the elimination of most primary tumors compared with other treatments, and significantly inhibited the growth of the distant uninjected primary tumors, similarly to free APP with frequent injections, which induced the longest survival time for the mice in this group.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2017

Preparation of artificial red cell and its application on alleviation of tumor hypoxia

Jiaxin Qu; Xiaomeng Guo; Wei Li; Wanqing Hou; Hanbo Zhang; Lihua Luo; Chunqi Zhu; Jie Yang; Xiaoyi Yin; Yuan Tao; Yong-Zhong Du; Yan Lou; Dawei Chen; Jian You

Hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers were developed as an alternative for blood transfusion. However, the research progress for their further clinic applications was slow in recent several years. Hypoxia is found in most solid tumors, which is responsible for the tumor formation, increased metastasis, drug resistance during therapeutic process as well as poor patient survival. In this work, novel hemoglobin (Hb) loaded nanoliposomes, as artificial red cells for oxygen delivery, were optimized by screening various types of phospholipids and analyzing different mole ratio of phospholipid to cholesterol. The nanoliposomes presented a high encapsulating efficiency to hemoglobin and also significantly enhanced its stability. The obtained hemoglobin loaded nanoliposome (HLL) could be lyophilized for long term storage. HLL did not cause significant cell death in the concentration range of 0-100μg equivalent Hb/mL under normoxia and hypoxia incubation conditions, suggesting the low cytotoxicity and high biocompatibility of HLL. Importantly, HLL could efficiently accumulate into subcutaneous and deep orthotopic tumors, inducing a significant decrease of hypoxia-inducible factors 1α subunits (HIF-1α) in the tumors and remarkably reduced expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). The study of acute and chronic toxicity indicated that HLL did not induce obvious damage to main organs of mice after intravenous injections with total Hb dose of 120mg/kg. We presented a promising method for relieving the hypoxia degree in solid tumors and down-regulating HIF-1α protein by directly delivering oxygen into tumors, which will be very helpful for subsequent cancer therapy.

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Wei Li

Zhejiang University

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