| Literature DB >> 27423095 |
Liangliang Dai1, Yonglin Yu1, Zhong Luo1, Menghuan Li1, Weizhen Chen1, Xinkun Shen1, Feng Chen1, Qiang Sun1, Qingfeng Zhang1, Hao Gu1, Kaiyong Cai2.
Abstract
This study reports a reactive oxygen species (ROS) sensitive drug delivery system based on amphiphilic polymer of poly(propylene sulfide)-polyethylene glycol-serine-folic acid (PPS-mPEG-Ser-FA). The polymer could form homogeneous micelles with an average diameter of around 80 nm through self-assembly, which would then be loaded with the singlet oxygen-generating photosensitizer of zinc phthalocyanine (ZNPC) and anti-cancer drug of DOX. The disassembly of micelles could be triggered by the hydrophobic to hydrophilic transition of the PPS core in response to ROS-induced oxidation in vitro. ZNPC molecules are capable of producing ROS under laser irradiation, which results in the rapid disassembly of micelles and releasing of the anti-tumor drug for tumor therapy under physiological condition otherwise. Moreover, the excessive ROS production deriving from ZNPC synergically induces cells apoptosis. Furthermore, the DOX loaded amphiphilic micelles could be internalized by tumor cells via FA receptor-mediated endocytosis to effectively inhibit the tumor growth in vivo, while with only minimal toxic side effects. The results in vitro and in vivo consistently demonstrate that the light-responsive micelle is a promising biodegradable nanocarrier for on-command drug release and targeted tumor therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Disassembly; Photosensitizer; ROS-response; Self-assembly micelle; Targeted tumor therapy
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27423095 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2016.07.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479