3.8 Article

Manganese Phosphate-Doxorubicin-Based Nanomedicines Using Mimetic Mineralization for Cancer Chemotherapy

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages 1930-1941

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.2c00011

Keywords

manganese phosphate; biomineralization; drug delivery; antitumor effect

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51902289]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [LQ19E020010, QQ20H190001]
  3. China Scholarship Council, Exchange Program of China Association for Science and Technology, Yucai Program of Zhejiang Association for Science and Technology
  4. Key Research & Development Program of Zhejiang Province [2021C01180, 2019C04020]
  5. Basic Research Foundation of ZSTU [18012134-Y, 2020Q008]

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In this study, a one-step method for the preparation of manganese phosphate-doxorubicin nanomedicines was proposed by manganese ion and doxorubicin complexation. The nanocomplexes exhibited controlled sizes and shapes, and the drug molecules were integrated into the nanocarriers by mimetic mineralization, allowing for high-efficiency drug release and achieving significant cancer inhibition.
Inorganic nanomaterials showed great potential as drug carriers for chemotherapeutics molecules due to their biocompatible physical and chemical properties. A manganesebased inorganic nanomaterial manganese phosphate (MnP) had become a new drug carrier in cancer therapy. However, the approach for manganese phosphate preparation and drug integration is still confined in complex methods. Inspired by mimetic mineralization, we proposed a one-step method for the preparation of manganese phosphate-doxorubicin (DOX) nanomedicines (MnP-DOX) by manganese ion and DOX complexation. The structural characterization results revealed that the prepared MnP-DOX nanocomplexes were homogeneous with controlled sizes and shapes. More importantly, the MnP-DOX nanocomposites could significantly induce cancer inhibition in vitro and in vivo. The results indicated that the drug molecules were integrated into MnP nanocarriers by mimetic mineralization, which not only prevented the premature release of the drug but also reduced excessive modification. Moreover, the designed MnP-DOX complex showed high loading efficacy and pH-dependent degradation leading to drug release, achieving high efficiency for cancer chemotherapy in vitro and in vivo via a facile process. These achievements presented an approach to construct the manganese phosphate-based chemotherapy nanomedicines by mimetic mineralization for cancer therapy.

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