# Piezoelectric Barium Titanate Nanostimulators for the Treatment of   Glioblastoma Multiforme

**Authors:** Attilio Marino, Enrico Almici, Simone Migliorin, Christos Tapeinos,, Matteo Battaglini, Valentina Cappello, Marco Marchetti, Giuseppe de Vito,, Riccardo Cicchi, Francesco Saverio Pavone, Gianni Ciofani

arXiv: 1812.08248 · 2018-12-21

## TL;DR

This study introduces ultrasound-sensitive piezoelectric barium titanate nanoparticles functionalized with transferrin receptor antibodies to remotely stimulate glioblastoma cells, reducing proliferation and enhancing chemotherapy effectiveness.

## Contribution

It presents a novel nanotechnological method for targeted electric stimulation of glioblastoma cells using functionalized piezoelectric nanoparticles activated by ultrasound.

## Key findings

- Significant reduction in glioblastoma cell proliferation.
- Enhanced sensitivity to temozolomide chemotherapy.
- Induction of anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects.

## Abstract

Major obstacles to the successful treatment of gliolastoma multiforme are mostly related to the acquired resistance to chemotherapy drugs and, after surgery, to the cancer recurrence in correspondence of residual microscopic foci. As innovative anticancer approach, low-intensity electric stimulation represents a physical treatment able to reduce multidrug resistance of cancer and to induce remarkable anti-proliferative effects by interfering with Ca2+ and K+ homeostasis and by affecting the organization of the mitotic spindles. However, to preserve healthy cells, it is utterly important to direct the electric stimuli only to malignant cells. In this work, we propose a nanotechnological approach based on ultrasound-sensitive piezoelectric nanoparticles to remotely deliver electric stimulations to glioblastoma cells. Barium titanate nanoparticles (BTNPs) have been functionalized with an antibody against the transferrin receptor (TfR) in order to obtain the dual targeting of blood-brain barrier and of glioblastoma cells. The remote ultrasound-mediated piezo-stimulation allowed to significantly reduce in vitro the proliferation of glioblastoma cells and, when combined with a sub-toxic concentration of temozolomide, induced an increased sensitivity to the chemotherapy treatment and remarkable anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.08248