4.8 Article

Enzyme-Powered Gated Mesoporous Silica Nanomotors for On-Command Intracellular Payload Delivery

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages 12171-12183

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b06706

Keywords

nanomotors; drug delivery; controlled release; nanocarriers; enzymatic catalysis; stimuli-responsive nanomaterials; gatekeepers

Funding

  1. La Caixa Banking Foundation
  2. Spanish government
  3. Spanish Government (MINECO) [MAT2015-64139-C4-1, CTQ2014-58989-PCTQ2015-71936-REDT, CTQ2015-68879-R, CTQ2015-72471-EXP]
  4. BBVA foundation (MEDIROBOTS)
  5. Generalitat de Catalunya
  6. Generalitat Valenciana [PROMETEO/2018/024, PROMETEOII/2014/061]
  7. MINECO
  8. European Union [H2020-MSCA-IF-2018]

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The introduction of stimuli-responsive cargo release capabilities on self-propelled micro- and nano- motors holds enormous potential in a number of applications in the biomedical field. Herein, we report the preparation of mesoporous silica nano-particles gated with pH-responsive supramolecular nanovalves and equipped with urease enzymes which act as chemical engines to power the nanomotors. The nanoparticles are loaded with different cargo molecules ([Ru(bpy)(3)]Cl-2 (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) or doxorubicin), grafted with benzimidazole groups on the outer surface, and capped by the formation of inclusion complexes between benzimidazole and cyclodextrin-modified urease. The nanomotor exhibits enhanced Brownian motion in the presence of urea. Moreover, no cargo is released at neutral pH, even in the presence of the biofuel urea, due to the blockage of the pores by the bulky benzimidazole:cyclodextrin-urease caps. Cargo delivery is only triggered on-command at acidic pH due to the protonation of benzimidazole groups, the dethreading of the supramolecular nanovalves, and the subsequent uncapping of the nanoparticles. Studies with HeLa cells indicate that the presence of biofuel urea enhances nanoparticle internalization and both [Ru(bpy)(3)]Cl-2 or doxorubicin intracellular release due to the acidity of lysosomal compartments. Gated enzyme-powered nanomotors shown here display some of the requirements for ideal drug delivery carriers such as the capacity to self-propel and the ability to sense the environment and deliver the payload on demand in response to predefined stimuli.

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