4.8 Article

Amphiphilic semiconducting polymer as multifunctional nanocarrier for fluorescence/photoacoustic imaging guided chemo-photothermal therapy

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 145, Issue -, Pages 168-177

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2017.08.037

Keywords

Semiconducting polymer nanoparticles; Photoacoustic imaging; Photothermal therapy; Near-infrared fluorescence imaging; Drug delivery

Funding

  1. Nanyang Technological University [NTU-SUG: M4081627.120]
  2. Singapore Ministry of Education [RG133/15 M4011559, MOE2016-T2-1-098]
  3. Singapore Ministry of Health's National Medical Research Council [NMRC/OFIRG/0005/2016: M4062012]
  4. National Basic Research Program of China [2015CB856503]
  5. NSFC [51622305]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Chemo-photothermal nanotheranostics has the advantage of synergistic therapeutic effect, providing opportunities for optimized cancer therapy. However, current chemo-photothermal nanotheranostic systems generally comprise more than three components, encountering the potential issues of unstable nanostructures and unexpected conflicts in optical and biophysical properties among different components. We herein synthesize an amphiphilic semiconducting polymer (PEG-PCB) and utilize it as a multifunctional nanocarrier to simplify chemo-photothermal nanotheranostics. PEG-PCB has a semiconducting backbone that not only serves as the diagnostic component for near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence and photoacoustic (PA) imaging, but also acts as the therapeutic agent for photothermal therapy. In addition, the hydrophobic backbone of PEG-PCB provides strong hydrophobic and pi-pi interactions with the aromatic anticancer drug such as doxorubicin for drug encapsulation and delivery. Such a trifunctionality of PEG -PCB eventually results in a greatly simplified nanotheranostic system with only two components but multimodal imaging and therapeutic capacities, permitting effective NIR fluorescence/PA imaging guided chemo-photothermal therapy of cancer in living mice. Our study thus provides a molecular engineering approach to integrate essential properties into one polymer for multimodal nanotheranostics. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available