4.8 Article

Core-Satellite Nanomedicines for in Vivo Real-Time Monitoring of Enzyme-Activatable Drug Release by Fluorescence and Photoacoustic Dual-Modal Imaging

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 176-186

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b05136

Keywords

core-satellite; drug release in vivo; nanomedicines; computer simulation; dual-modal imaging

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation Key Projects [31630027, 31430031, 81601603, 81773185, 81471739]
  2. NSFC-DFG project [31761133013]
  3. National Distinguished Young Scholars grant [31225009]
  4. external cooperation program of the Chinese Academy of Science [121D11KYSB20160066]
  5. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA09030301]
  6. National Key Research Program of China [2016YFA0100900, 2016YFA0100902]
  7. NanOArt grant of the Mission Sustain ability of the University of Rome Tor Vergata

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It remains an unresolved challenge to achieve spatial and temporal monitoring of drug release from nano medicines (NMs) in vivo, which is of crucial importance in disease treatment. To tackle this issue, we constructed core-satellite ICG/DOX@Gel-CuS NMs, which consist of gelatin (Gel) nanoparticles (NPs) with payloads of near-infrared fluorochrome indocyanine green (ICG) and chemo-drug doxorubicin (DOX) and surrounding CuS NPs. The fluorescence of ICG was initially shielded by satellite CuS NPs within the intact ICG/DOX@Gel-CuS NMs and increased in proportion to the amount of DOX released from NMs in response to enzyme-activated NMs degradation. For more comprehensive understanding of the drug-release profile, a theoretical model derived from computer simulation was employed to reconstruct the enzyme-activatable drug release of the ICG/DOX@Gel-CuS NMs, which demonstrated the underlying kinetics functional relationship between the released DOX amount and recovered ICG fluorescence intensity. The kinetics of drug release in vivo was assessed by administrating ICG/DOX@Gel-CuS NMs both locally and systemically into MDA-MB-231 tumor-bearing mice. Upon accumulation of ICG/DOX@Gel-CuS NMs in the tumor, overexpressed enzymes triggered the degradation of the gelatin scaffold as well as the release of DOX and ICG, which can be visually depicted with the ICG fluorescence signal increasing only in the tumor area by fluorescence imaging. Additionally, the photoacoustic signal from CuS NPs was independent from the physical status of ICG/DOX@Gel-CuS NMs and hence was utilized for real-time NMs tracking. Thus, by taking advantage of the core satellite architecture and NMs degradability in tumor site, the DOX release profile of ICG/DOX@Gel-CuS NMs was monitored by fluorescence and photoacoustic dual-modal imaging in a real-time noninvasive manner.

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