3.8 Article

Dissolution and Biological Assessment of Cancer-Targeting Nano-ZIF-8 in Zebrafish Embryos

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 2445-2454

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.2c00186

Keywords

cancer; chemotherapy; targeting nanotherapeutics; reticular chemistry; drug delivery; zebrafish embryo; permeability; toxicity

Funding

  1. Ministry of Higher Education, Malaysia under LRGS NanoMITe [RU029-2014, 5526306]
  2. Universiti Putra Malaysia [GP-IPB/2017, 9580901]
  3. Royal Academy of Engineering's Transforming Systems [TSP2021/100001]
  4. NewtonKhalidi Fund

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This study reports a cancer-targeting nanotherapeutic with a sustainable dissolution rate in acidic media and enhanced permeability rate in healthy zebrafish embryos, without toxicity.
Cancer-targeting nanotherapeutics offer promising opportunities for selective delivery of cytotoxic chemotherapeutics to cancer cells. However, the understanding of dissolution behavior and safety profiles of such nanotherapeutics is scarce. In this study, we report the dissolution profile of a cancer-targeting nanotherapeutic, gemcitabine (GEM) encapsulated within RGD-functionalized zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (GEM subset of RGD@nZIF-8), in dissolution media having pH = 6.0 and 7.4. GEM subset of RGD@nZIF-8 was not only responsive in acidic media (pH = 6.0) but also able to sustain the dissolution rate (57.6%) after 48 h compared to non-targeting nanotherapeutic GEM subset of nZIF-8 (76%). This was reflected by the f(2) value of 36.1, which indicated a difference in the dissolution behaviors of GEM subset of RGDPnZIF 8 and GEM subset of nZIF-8 in acidic media compared to those in neutral media (pH = 7.4). A dissolution kinetic study showed that the GEM release mechanism from GEM subset of RGD@nZIF-8 followed the Higuchi model. In comparison to a non-targeting nanotherapeutic, the cancer-targeting nanotherapeutic exhibited an enhanced permeability rate in healthy zebrafish embryos but did not induce lethality to 50% of the embryos (LC30 > 250 mu g mL(-1)) with significantly improved survivability (75%) after 96 h of incubation. Monitoring malformation showed minimal adverse effects with only 8.3% of edema at 62.5 mu g mL(-1). This study indicates that cancer-targeting GEM subset of RGDPnZIF, with its pH-responsive behavior for sustaining chemotherapeutic dissolution in a physiologically relevant environment and its non-toxicity toward the healthy embryos within the tested concentrations, has considerable potential for use in cancer treatment.

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