Cargando…

Polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer

Development of smart stimuli-responsive prodrug nanomaterials for fast drug release and efficient antitumor therapy has attracted great attention in recent years. However, the inherent instability of naked prodrugs in the blood is an important challenge limiting their biomedical applications. Althou...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yang, Bin, Wang, Kaiyuan, Zhang, Dong, Ji, Bin, Zhao, Dongyang, Wang, Xin, Zhang, Haotian, Kan, Qiming, He, Zhonggui, Sun, Jin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9062053/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35517686
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra01230c
_version_ 1784698847623118848
author Yang, Bin
Wang, Kaiyuan
Zhang, Dong
Ji, Bin
Zhao, Dongyang
Wang, Xin
Zhang, Haotian
Kan, Qiming
He, Zhonggui
Sun, Jin
author_facet Yang, Bin
Wang, Kaiyuan
Zhang, Dong
Ji, Bin
Zhao, Dongyang
Wang, Xin
Zhang, Haotian
Kan, Qiming
He, Zhonggui
Sun, Jin
author_sort Yang, Bin
collection PubMed
description Development of smart stimuli-responsive prodrug nanomaterials for fast drug release and efficient antitumor therapy has attracted great attention in recent years. However, the inherent instability of naked prodrugs in the blood is an important challenge limiting their biomedical applications. Although a number of strategies have been taken to prevent prodrugs from hydrolyzing due to blood composition, most of these strategies are unsatisfactory. Here, we designed an extraordinary ROS-triggered prodrug nanoplatform fabricated by using a single thioether linker to conjugate PTX with 6-maleimidocaproic acid (MAL), resulting in the PTX-S-MAL prodrug self-assembling into uniform size nanoparticles; then the prodrug nanoplatform was modified with a polydopamine coating and PEGylation to confer high solubility and stability. In in vitro experiments, the polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanosystem showed a high sensitivity in term of various H(2)O(2) concentrations, and the PDA coating on the surface of the prodrug nanosystem didn't affect the drug release properties. Moreover, the excellent polydopamine-modified ROS-triggered prodrug nanoplatform selectively and rapidly releases PTX in response to the ROS overproduced in tumor cells, but showed less cytotoxicity against normal cells. In in vivo experiments, the prepared polydopamine-modified prodrug-nanosystem obviously enhances the stability and tumor accumulation of prodrug, producing a remarkably improved breast cancer treatment with minimal side effects. Our studies demonstrated that this modified nanoplatform could significantly improve chemotherapy efficiency, which will find great potential in cancer treatment.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9062053
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher The Royal Society of Chemistry
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-90620532022-05-04 Polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer Yang, Bin Wang, Kaiyuan Zhang, Dong Ji, Bin Zhao, Dongyang Wang, Xin Zhang, Haotian Kan, Qiming He, Zhonggui Sun, Jin RSC Adv Chemistry Development of smart stimuli-responsive prodrug nanomaterials for fast drug release and efficient antitumor therapy has attracted great attention in recent years. However, the inherent instability of naked prodrugs in the blood is an important challenge limiting their biomedical applications. Although a number of strategies have been taken to prevent prodrugs from hydrolyzing due to blood composition, most of these strategies are unsatisfactory. Here, we designed an extraordinary ROS-triggered prodrug nanoplatform fabricated by using a single thioether linker to conjugate PTX with 6-maleimidocaproic acid (MAL), resulting in the PTX-S-MAL prodrug self-assembling into uniform size nanoparticles; then the prodrug nanoplatform was modified with a polydopamine coating and PEGylation to confer high solubility and stability. In in vitro experiments, the polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanosystem showed a high sensitivity in term of various H(2)O(2) concentrations, and the PDA coating on the surface of the prodrug nanosystem didn't affect the drug release properties. Moreover, the excellent polydopamine-modified ROS-triggered prodrug nanoplatform selectively and rapidly releases PTX in response to the ROS overproduced in tumor cells, but showed less cytotoxicity against normal cells. In in vivo experiments, the prepared polydopamine-modified prodrug-nanosystem obviously enhances the stability and tumor accumulation of prodrug, producing a remarkably improved breast cancer treatment with minimal side effects. Our studies demonstrated that this modified nanoplatform could significantly improve chemotherapy efficiency, which will find great potential in cancer treatment. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-03-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9062053/ /pubmed/35517686 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra01230c Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Yang, Bin
Wang, Kaiyuan
Zhang, Dong
Ji, Bin
Zhao, Dongyang
Wang, Xin
Zhang, Haotian
Kan, Qiming
He, Zhonggui
Sun, Jin
Polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer
title Polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer
title_full Polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer
title_fullStr Polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed Polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer
title_short Polydopamine-modified ROS-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer
title_sort polydopamine-modified ros-responsive prodrug nanoplatform with enhanced stability for precise treatment of breast cancer
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9062053/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35517686
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9ra01230c
work_keys_str_mv AT yangbin polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT wangkaiyuan polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT zhangdong polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT jibin polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT zhaodongyang polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT wangxin polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT zhanghaotian polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT kanqiming polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT hezhonggui polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer
AT sunjin polydopaminemodifiedrosresponsiveprodrugnanoplatformwithenhancedstabilityforprecisetreatmentofbreastcancer