| Literature DB >> 35166116 |
Fengjun Sun1, Yu Wang1, Qianmei Wang1,2, Xiaowen Wang1, Pu Yao1, Wei Feng1, Qian Yuan1, Xiaowei Qi3, Sheng Chen4, Wendan Pu2, Rong Huang2, Qing Dai1, Jun Lv1, Qian Wang1, Wenhao Shen5, Peiyuan Xia1, Dinglin Zhang2,5.
Abstract
Photocleavable biomaterials and bioconjugates have been widely researched for tissue engineering, cell culture, and therapeutics delivery. However, most in vivo applications of these materials or conjugates require external irradiation, and some of the light sources used such as ultraviolet (UV) light have poor tissue penetration. To address these key limitations, we synthesized a photocleavable nanoprodrug using luminol (a luminescent donor), chlorambucil (CHL, i.e., an antitumor drug with a photocleavable linker), and polyethylene glycol-folic acid conjugates (a targeted moiety) loaded onto polyamidoamine (PAMAM). The synthesized nanoprodrug can smartly release its payloads through photocleavage of photoresponsive linker by UV light, which was produced in situ by reacting luminol with pathological reactive oxygen species (ROS). The luminescence performance and absorption spectrum of this nanoprodrug was characterized in detail. In vitro cellular assays verified that the nanoprodrugs could be efficiently internalized by 4T1 and MDA-MB-231 cells, and the CHL released from the nanoprodrugs could distinctly decrease cell viability through the damage of DNA in cells. In vivo animal experiments demonstrated that the nanoprodrugs were mainly accumulated at tumor sites, and the antitumor drug CHL could be smartly released from the nanoprodrugs through cleavage of photosensitive linkers at a high level of ROS. The released CHL significantly inhibited the growth of tumors without any obvious adverse effects. Our results provide a practicable strategy to expand the in vivo application of photocleavable biomaterials and bioconjugates.Entities:
Keywords: photocleavable nanoprodrug; reactive oxygen species; self-illuminating; targeting therapy; tumor microenvironment
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35166116 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c21665
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229