Investigator

Frank Caruso

Professor, NHMRC Leadership Fellow · The University of Melbourne, Department of Chemical Engineering

About

FCFrank Caruso
Papers(1)
Transforming the Chem…
Collaborators(8)
Giancarlo ForteGiovanni Luca BerettaMarco CassaniMuthupandian Ashokkum…Nadia ZaffaroniSoraia FernandesSukhvir Kaur BhanguFrancesca Cavalieri
Institutions(4)
The University Of Mel…King's College LondonFondazione IRCCS Isti…Rmit University

Papers

Transforming the Chemical Structure and Bio‐Nano Activity of Doxorubicin by Ultrasound for Selective Killing of Cancer Cells

AbstractReconfiguring the structure and selectivity of existing chemotherapeutics represents an opportunity for developing novel tumor‐selective drugs. Here, as a proof‐of‐concept, the use of high‐frequency sound waves is demonstrated to transform the nonselective anthracycline doxorubicin into a tumor selective drug molecule. The transformed drug self‐aggregates in water to form ≈200 nm nanodrugs without requiring organic solvents, chemical agents, or surfactants. The nanodrugs preferentially interact with lipid rafts in the mitochondria of cancer cells. The mitochondrial localization of the nanodrugs plays a key role in inducing reactive oxygen species mediated selective death of breast cancer, colorectal carcinoma, ovarian carcinoma, and drug‐resistant cell lines. Only marginal cytotoxicity (80–100% cell viability) toward fibroblasts and cardiomyocytes is observed, even after administration of high doses of the nanodrug (25–40 µg mL−1). Penetration, cytotoxicity, and selectivity of the nanodrugs in tumor‐mimicking tissues are validated by using a 3D coculture of cancer and healthy cells and 3D cell‐collagen constructs in a perfusion bioreactor. The nanodrugs exhibit tropism for lung and limited accumulation in the liver and spleen, as suggested by in vivo biodistribution studies. The results highlight the potential of this approach to transform the structure and bioactivity of anticancer drugs and antibiotics bearing sono‐active moieties.

618Works
1Papers
8Collaborators

Positions

2023–

Professor, NHMRC Leadership Fellow

The University of Melbourne · Department of Chemical Engineering

2018–

Professor, NHMRC Senior Principal Research Fellow

The University of Melbourne · Department of Chemical Engineering

2014–

Deputy Director

ARC Centre of Excellence in Convergent Bio-Nano Science and Technology

2012–

Professor, ARC Australian Laureate Fellow

University of Melbourne · Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

2002–

Professor, ARC Federation Fellow

University of Melbourne · Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

1999–

Group Leader & Research Scientist

Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces

1997–

Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellow

Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces

1994–

Postdoctoral Fellow

CSIRO

Education

1993

PhD

University of Melbourne

1989

Bachelor of Science (Honours)

University of Melbourne

Country

AU

Keywords
nanomaterialspolymer sciencebiomolecular engineeringnanoparticlesbiomaterialscolloidal delivery systems
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