| Literature DB >> 35890401 |
Kele Cristina Ferreira Dantas1, Jânia Dos Santos Rosário1, Priscila Pereira Silva-Caldeira1.
Abstract
Nanotechnology-based approaches for targeting the delivery and controlled release of metal-based therapeutic agents have revealed significant potential as tools for enhancing the therapeutic effect of metal-based agents and minimizing their systemic toxicities. In this context, a series of polymer-based nanosized systems designed to physically load or covalently conjugate metal-based therapeutic agents have been remarkably improving their bioavailability and anticancer efficacy. Initially, the polymeric nanocarriers were applied for platinum-based chemotherapeutic agents resulting in some nanoformulations currently in clinical tests and even in medical applications. At present, these nanoassemblies have been slowly expanding for nonplatinum-containing metal-based chemotherapeutic agents. Interestingly, for metal-based photosensitizers (PS) applied in photodynamic therapy (PDT), especially for cancer treatment, strategies employing polymeric nanocarriers have been investigated for almost 30 years. In this review, we address the polymeric nanocarrier-assisted metal-based therapeutics agent delivery systems with a specific focus on non-platinum systems; we explore some biological and physicochemical aspects of the polymer-metallodrug assembly. Finally, we summarize some recent advances in polymeric nanosystems coupled with metal-based compounds that present potential for successful clinical applications as chemotherapeutic or photosensitizing agents. We hope this review can provide a fertile ground for the innovative design of polymeric nanosystems for targeting the delivery and controlled release of metal-containing therapeutic agents.Entities:
Keywords: drug delivery systems; metallodrugs; photosensitizers; polymer conjugate
Year: 2022 PMID: 35890401 PMCID: PMC9320085 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14071506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.525
Figure 1Some advantages of using polymeric nanocarriers to deliver metal-based therapeutic agents.
Figure 2Schematic representation of polymer-based nanocarriers: (a) nanomicelle (constituted by a hydrophilic shell and hydrophobic core where the metallodrug are entrapped), (b) nanosphere (polymeric matrix where the metallodrug is uniformly dispersed), and (c) nanocapsule (the metallodrug is entrapped in a cavity that is surrounded by a polymeric membrane).
Figure 3Schematic illustration of the passive and active pathways of nanocarriers’ internalization into tumor cells and controlled metallodrug release from NPs by intrinsic and/or extrinsic stimuli.
Non-platinum metal-based therapeutic agents (metallodrugs and PSs) are physically loaded into or covalently conjugated to polymer-based nanosized devices.
| Structures of Metal-Based Drug/ | Metallic Center | Polymer/Copolymer | Method of Incorporation | Type of Nanocarrier | Average Diameter Size (nm) | Responsive Delivery/ | Potential Therapeutic Approaches | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ru3+ | PLA | Physical encap. | Micelles | 163 | - | CTX | [ | |
| PEG | Physical encap. | Micelles | <100 | - | CTX | [ | ||
| Ru2+ | PEG-methyl ether acrylate | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 90 | - | CTX | [ | |
|
| Ru3+ | PF127 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 24 | PF127 was functionalized with carbohydrate (fluorescein, glucosamine, and β-D-glucopyranoside) for target delivery. | CTX | [ |
|
| Ru3+ | PF127 | Physical encap. | Micelles | - | - | CTX | [ |
| Ru3+/ | stearate-PEG40/100, ethyl arachidate, | Physical encap. | NPs | 120 | - | CTX | [ | |
| poly(methacrylic acid)-PS80-starch | Physical encap. | NPs | 130 | - | CTX | [ | ||
| Ru2+ | PLGA | Physical encap. | Nanosphere | 100 | - | CTX | [ | |
|
| Ru2+ | PEI- | Physical encap. | Nanosphere | 153 | Biotin was conjugated to polymer chain for target delivery | CTX | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | PEG- poly(aspartate) | Physical encap. | NPs | 19 | - | PDT | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | poly( | Physical encap. | Micelles | 8 | - | PDT | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | PF127 | Physical encap. | Nanosphere | 31–162 | - | PDT | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | DSPE-PEG2000 | Physical encap. | NPs | 100 | Biotin was conjugated to the polymer chain for target delivery | PDT | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | DSPE-PEG2000 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 122 | FA was conjugated to the polymer chain for target delivery | PDT | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | PLGA | Physical encap. | NPs | 130–140 | Co-delivery of Ru-based radiosensitizer alongside radionuclide (111In). The functionalized PLGA surface incorporates the metal ion chelator DTPA for radiolabelling and the targeting ligand for EGF receptor (EGFR) | Ionizing radiation and radiosensitizing CTX. | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | bipyridine-containing block copolymers | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 41 ( | Biotin was conjugated to polymer chain. Addition of streptavidin to the Ru-loaded micelles induces their cross-linking into larger networks, through biotin-streptavidin binding | Luminescent detector of biomolecules | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | PEG- | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | Photo-controlled delivery of Ru2+ complexes | PDT | [ | |
|
| Ru2+ | 2,4-diisocyanato-1-methy-lbenzene-PEG monomethyl ether | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 180 | Photo-controlled delivery of Ru2+ complex | PDT + | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | PEG- | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 15 | Photo-controlled delivery of Ru2+ complex. Polymer chain was covalently attached to anticancer drug chlorambucil | PACT | [ |
|
| Ru2+ | PEG- | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 22 | Photo-controlled delivery of Ru2+ complex | PDT | [ |
|
| Pt4+/Ru2+ | PEG | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 90 | Dual-Responsive Pt4+/Ru2+. Reduction-responsive Pt4+ and red-light-responsive Ru2+ moieties. | CTX + | [ |
| Ru2+ | polysarcosine- | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 91 | Photo-controlled delivery of Ru2+ complexes | PDT + | [ | |
|
| Ru2+ | PLA | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 120–310 | Photo-controlled delivery of Ru2+ complex | PDT + | [ |
| Ru2+ or | PP123 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 15 | - | CTX | [ | |
|
| Ru3+ | caffeic acid-modified chitosan | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 30–120 | - | CTX | [ |
| Ru2+ | PP123 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 26 | - | CTX | [ | |
|
| Ru2+ | PEG- | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 60 | - | CTX | [ |
| Ga 3+ | PEG- | Physical encap. | Micelles | 17 | - | CTX | [ | |
| Ga3+ | PF127 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 31–40 | - | PDT | [ | |
|
| Ga3+ | PF127 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 33 | Polymer chain was functionalized with FA for target delivery | PDT | [ |
|
| Ga3+ | PLGA–PEG | Physical encap. | Nanosphere | 86–204 | - | PDT | [ |
|
| Au+ | PEG-poly(β-amino ester) | Physical encap. | Micelles | 43–50 | pH-responsive drug delivery | CTX | [ |
|
| Au3+ | DSPE-PEG2000 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 17–21 | - | CTX | [ |
| PF127 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 26–32 | The hydrophilic shell of micelles was labeled with bioactive CCK8 peptide for target-selective delivery | CTX | [ | ||
|
| Au+ | Oligo-(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 160 | - | CTX | [ |
|
| Au+ | Poly(2-hydroxy- ethyl acrylate) | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 75 | - | CTX | [ |
|
| Au+ | Glycopolymer based on 3-Gluconamido-propyl metha-crylamid and 3-aminopro-pyl methacry-lamid (10 and 30 KDa) | Covalent conjug. | - | 100–250 | - | CTX | [ |
| Au3+ | PEG | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 121 | Co-delivery of DOX | CTX | [ | |
|
| Cu2+ | PF127 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 23–26 | PF127 was functionalized with carbohydrates (fluorescein, glucosamine, or β-D-glucopyranoside) for target delivery. | CTX | [ |
|
| Cu2+ | Chitosan | Physical encap. | NPs | 240 | FA was conjugated to chitosan for target delivery | CTX | [ |
|
| Cu2+ | PEG-PLGA | Physical encap. | Nanosphere | 145 | - | CTX | [ |
|
| Cu+ | PLA–PEG | Physical encap. | NPs | 50–150 | - | CTX | [ |
|
| Cu+/Cu2+ | PEG- | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 120−135 | - | CTX + | [ |
|
| Cu2+ | Hyaluronic | Physical encap. | NPs | 125 | pH/GSH dual-responsive drug delivery | CTX | [ |
|
| Cu2+ | Chitosan | Physical encap. | NPs | 50–65 | FA or her-2 (specific peptide overexpressed in many cancer cells) was attached to stearic acid-modified chitosan | CTX | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | PEG5000-DSPE | Physical encap. | Micelles | 160 | - | PDT | [ |
| PLGA | Physical encap. | NPs | 285 | - | PDT | [ | ||
| metoxiPEG- | Physical encap. | Micelles | 32–35 | Polymer chain was functionalized with FA for target delivery | PDT | [ | ||
| PEG- | Physical encap. | Micelles | <150 | Polymer chain was functionalized with FA for target delivery | PDT | [ | ||
| Heparin, polyethyleneimine and L-cysteine | Physical encap. | Spherical NPs | <200 nm | - | PDT | [ | ||
| Heparin, DSPE, and l-histidine | Physical encap. | Micelles | 111 | pH-responsive drug delivery | PDT | [ | ||
| poly( | Physical encap. | Micelles | 167–230 | - | PDT | [ | ||
| poly(ε-capro-lactone)-PEO | Physical encap. | Micelles | 61–97 | Co-delivery of DTX. | PDT + | [ | ||
| 3-caprolactone, 1,4,8-trioxa [4.6]spiro-9-undecanone and PEG | Physical encap. | NPs | 108 nm | Co-delivery of DOX. | PDT + | [ | ||
|
| Zn2+ | PEG-PLA | Physical encap. | NPs | 464–988 | PDT | [ | |
|
| Zn2+ | poly(phthalocyanine-co-sebacic anhydride) | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 166 | - | PDT | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | tetra-(methoxy-PEGl)-poly(2-( | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 51–342 (dependent on pH) | pH-responsive drug delivery and co-delivery of DOX | PDT + | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | PEO-poly(propylene oxide) | Physical encap. | Micelles | <405 nm | - | PDT | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | PEG | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 350 | - | CTX (HO-1 inhibitor) | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | SMA | Physical encap. | Micelles | 176 | - | CTX (HO-1 Inhibitor) | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | SMA | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 112 | - | Tumor imaging | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | HPMA | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 30–80 | - | Tumor imaging | [ |
| Zn2+ | PEG | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | - | - | PDT | [ | |
|
| Zn2+ | PEG | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 100–150 | Cinnamaldehyde was incorporated in polymer chain to enhance the ROS generation | CTX (oxidation and HO-1 inhibition) | [ |
| Zn2+ | PP123 | Physical encap. | Micelles | - | - | PDT | [ | |
|
| Zn2+ | DSPE-PEG2000 | Physical encap. | Nanocapsule | 100 | Biotin was conjugated to polymer chain for target-selective drug delivery | PDT | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | DSPE-PEG2000-OCH3 | Physical encap. | Nanocapsule | 119 | - | PDT | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | DSPE-PEG2000- | Physical encap. | NPs | 39 | The NPs surface was modified with cell penetrating peptide (Tat) to enhance the cellular uptake | PTT | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | HOOC-PEG-COOH, and PMHC18- | Physical encap. | NPs | 81 | - | Imaging and PTT | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | PEG | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 25 | - | PDT of psoriasis | [ |
|
| Zn2+ | poly(glycidyl methacrylate) | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 160 | - | PDIM | [ |
|
| Ir3+ | oligo-L-lysine Lys30 | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 128 | - | CTX | [ |
|
| Ir3+ | PEG- | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 50 | Polymeric chain was functionalized with FA for target delivery | CTX | [ |
|
| Ir3+ | PEG-benzoic imine-oligo-L-lysine | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 150 | pH-responsive drug delivery and the nanosystem was FA-modified for target drug release | CTX | [ |
| Ir3+ | PEG- | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 58–69 | - | CTX | [ | |
|
| Ir3+ | 1,4-dimethyl- naphthalene, PEG, and a modifiable disulfide group | Covalent conjug. | NPs | - | Photothermal-responsive delivery of extracellular 1O2 | Phothermal release of 1O2 | [ |
|
| Ir3+ | POEGMA- | Covalent conjug. | NPs | 65 | Photo-responsive drug delivery | PDT | [ |
| Ir3+ | P [DMAM-co-VQPy] | Covalent conjug. | NPs | - | pH responsive iridium-complex delivery. | PDT + | [ | |
|
| Al3+ | Physical encap. | Micelles | 35 | pH-responsive drug delivery | PDT | [ | |
| PLGA, PLA, and PLA–PEG | Physical encap. | NPs | 139–199 | - | PDT | [ | ||
| PF127 | Physical encap. | Micelles | 6 | - | PDT | [ | ||
|
| Fe2+ | PEG-PLA | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 59 | pH-responsive drug delivery and co-delivery of DOX | PDT + | [ |
|
| Fe2+ | polycaprolactone modified with histidine and PEG | Covalent conjug. | Micelles | 33 | pH-responsive drug delivery and co-delivery of DOX | PDT + | [ |
|
| Pd+ | Hyaluronic acid | Physical encap. | NPs | 204 | - | CTX of advanced melanoma | [ |
|
| Co3+ | PEG-PLGA | Physical encap. | Nanosphere | 191 | pH-dependent drug release | CTX against cancer and | [ |
|
| Mn2+ | PEG-PLGA | Physical encap. | Nanosphere | 93 | - | CTX | [ |
|
| Ag+ | Poly(acrylic acid)-b-polystryrene/PEG/PEG-PLGA/polyphosphoester | Physical encap. | NPs | - | - | Antimicrobial treatment | [ |
|
| Ag+ | Poly(e-caprolactone) | Physical encap. | NPs | 155–162 | - | Anti- | [ |
|
| Fe2+ | Marine atelocollagen | Physical encap. | Nanocapsules | - | - | Treat human malaria parasite | [ |
* The representations of the chemical structures were produced by employing the chemical structure drawing program ChemDraw Ultra 12.0.
Figure 4Distribution of noncovalent and covalent incorporation of metal-based therapeutic agents into polymeric nanocarriers.
Figure 5Chemical structures of ruthenium-based compounds that have entered clinical trials.
Figure 6Examples of metal coordination-driven polymeric nanosystems for drug delivery: (a) DOX and (b) 6-MP delivery [88,211], respectively.
Figure 7Structure of “OFF-to-ON” probe to Cu+ capture [218].
Figure 8Some examples of metal complexes covalently conjugated to polymer dots for cancer treatment by PDT and imaging probes [222,223,225].