| Literature DB >> 31379091 |
Hongzhang Deng1,2, Lisen Lin2, Sheng Wang2, Guocan Yu2, Zijian Zhou2, Yijing Liu2, Gang Niu2, Jibin Song1, Xiaoyuan Chen2.
Abstract
The targeted and sustained drug release from stimuli-responsive nanodelivery systems is limited by the irreversible and uncontrolled disruption of the currently used nanostructures. Bionic nanocapsules are designed by cross-linking polythymine and photoisomerized polyazobenzene (PETAzo) with adenine-modified ZnS (ZnS-A) nanoparticles (NPs) via nucleobase pairing. The ZnS-A NPs convert X-rays into UV radiation that isomerizes the azobenzene groups, which allows controlled diffusion of the active payloads across the bilayer membranes. In addition, the nucleobase pairing interactions between PETAzo and ZnS-A prevent drug leakage during their in vivo circulation, which not only enhances tumor accumulation but also maintains stability. These nanocapsules with tunable permeability show prolonged retention, remotely controlled drug release, enhanced targeted accumulation, and effective antitumor effects, indicating their potential as an anticancer drug delivery system.Entities:
Keywords: X-rays; azobenzene; controlled drug release; nucleobase pairing; permeability
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31379091 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201903443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849