4.8 Article

Self-Assembled Nanoparticles Based on PEGylated Conjugated Polyelectrolyte and Drug Molecules for Image-Guided Drug Delivery and Photodynamic Therapy

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 6, Issue 17, Pages 14903-14910

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am5020925

Keywords

conjugated polyelectrolyte; photodynamic therapy; drug delivery; theranostic; cancer therapy

Funding

  1. Singapore National Research Foundation [R-279-000-390-281]
  2. SMART [R279-000-378-592]
  3. Ministry of Defense [R279-000-340-232]
  4. Institute of Materials Research and Engineering of Singapore [IMRE/12-8P1103]

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A drug delivery system based on poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) grafted conjugated polyelectrolyte (CPE) has been developed to serve as a polymeric photosensitizer and drug carrier for combined photodynamic and chemotherapy. The amphiphilic brush copolymer can self-assemble into micellar nanopaticles (NPs) in aqueous media with hydrophobic conjugated polyelectrolyte backbone as the core and hydrophilic PEG as the shell. The NPs have an average diameter of about 100 nm, with the absorption and emission maxima at 502 and 598 nm, respectively, making them suitable for bioimaging applications. Moreover, the CPE itself can serve as a photosensitizer, which makes the NPs not only a carrier for drug but also a photosensitizing unit for photodynamic therapy, resulting in the combination of chemo- and photodynamic therapy for cancer. The half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) value for the combination therapy to U87-MG cells is 12.7 mu g mL(-1), which is much lower than that for the solely photodynamic therapy (25.5 mu g mL(-1)) or chemotherapy (132.8 mu g mL(-1)). To improve the tumor specificity of the system, cyclic arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (cRGD) tripeptide as the receptor to integrin alpha(v)beta(3) overexpressed cancer cells was further incorporated to the surface of the NPs. The delivery system based on PEGylated CPE is easy to fabricate, which integrates the merits of targeted cancer cell image, chemotherapeutic drug delivery, and photodynamic therapy, making it promising for cancer treatment.

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