4.7 Article

Stimuli-Responsive Drug Delivery of Doxorubicin Using Magnetic Nanoparticle Conjugated Poly(ethylene glycol)-g-Chitosan Copolymer

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms222313169

Keywords

iron-oxide nanoparticle; magnetic nanoparticle; redox-responsiveness; chitosan; stimuli-responsiveness

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korean government (MSIT) [NRF-2020R1A2C1102850]

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Stimuli-responsive nanoparticles, synthesized with glutathione and magnetic-sensitive nanocomposites, demonstrate dual-targeting strategy with redox-responsiveness and superior magnetic sensitivity. These nanoparticles exhibit high internalization efficiency in drug release and cell culture experiments, and in vivo studies show excellent anticancer drug targeting properties.
Stimuli-responsive nanoparticles are regarded as an ideal candidate for anticancer drug targeting. We synthesized glutathione (GSH) and magnetic-sensitive nanocomposites for a dual-targeting strategy. To achieve this goal, methoxy poly (ethylene glycol) (MePEG) was grafted to water-soluble chitosan (abbreviated as ChitoPEG). Then doxorubicin (DOX) was conjugated to the backbone of chitosan via disulfide linkage. Iron oxide (IO) magnetic nanoparticles were also conjugated to the backbone of chitosan to provide magnetic sensitivity. In morphological observation, images from a transmission electron microscope (TEM) showed that IO nanoparticles were embedded in the ChitoPEG/DOX/IO nanocomposites. In a drug release study, GSH addition accelerated DOX release rate from nanocomposites, indicating that nanocomposites have redox-responsiveness. Furthermore, external magnetic stimulus concentrated nanocomposites in the magnetic field and then provided efficient internalization of nanocomposites into cancer cells in cell culture experiments. In an animal study with CT26 cell-bearing mice, nanocomposites showed superior magnetic sensitivity and then preferentially targeted tumor tissues in the field of external magnetic stimulus. Nanocomposites composed of ChitoPEG/DOX/IO nanoparticle conjugates have excellent anticancer drug targeting properties.

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