4.8 Article

Bioresponsive Controlled Drug Release Based on Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles Coated with Reductively Sheddable Polymer Shell

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 574-585

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cm3037197

Keywords

thermo/pH-responsive; shell-sheddable; core/shell; MSN; controlled drug release

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [20874015, 51273047]
  2. Shanghai Rising-Star Program [10QH1400200]

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The design of bioresponsive controlled drug delivery systems is a promising approach in cancer therapy, but it still is a major challenge capable of optimum therapeutic efficacy, i.e. no premature drug leakage in blood circulation while having a rapid and complete release in tumor tissues. In this work, a kind of PEGylated core/shell structured composite nanoparticle was developed via precipitation polymerization, where a disulfide-cross-linked poly(N-vinylcaprolactam-co-methacrylic acid) (P(VCL-s-s-MAA)) polymer shell was created to act as sheddable thermo/pH-sensitive gatekeepers, and a carboxylic acid modified mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSN-COOH) core was applicable as an accessible reservoir to encapsulate high drug doses. At physiological conditions, the P(VCL-s-sMAA)-PEG shell underwent a distinct transition from a swollen state in pH 74 to a collapsed state in pH 5.0. Though sufficiently stable in water, composite nanoparticles were prone to fast dissociation and rupture when subjecting to 10 mM glutathione (GSH), due to the shedding of polymer walls through reductive cleavage of intermediate disulfide bonds, so that the polymer shell was active in moderating the diffusion of embedded drugs in-and-out of MSN channels. The cumulative in vitro release of DOX-loaded composite nanoparticles allowed a low trace of DOX diffusion below volume phase transition temperature (VPTT) and a significant release rate above its VPTT, while the most rapid and perfect release was achieved under a reductive environment (pH 6.5 and 10 mM GSH), mimicking that of intracellular cytosol compartments. The in vitro cell assay of blank carriers to normal cells indicated that the composite nanoparticles were suitable as drug carriers, but DOX-loaded carriers had a similar intensive toxicity to cancer cells compared with free DOX. Therefore, these stimuli responsive composite nanoparticles with a reductively sheddable and thermo/pH-responsive polymer shell gate could, in principle, be applied for in vivo cancer therapy, and synergistic drug delivery can be accomplished just in time in a precise event over the location.

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