4.6 Article

Biocompatible, Multi-Mode, Fluorescent, T2 MRI Contrast Magnetoelectric-Silica Nanoparticles (MagSiNs), for On-Demand Doxorubicin Delivery to Metastatic Cancer Cells

期刊

PHARMACEUTICALS
卷 15, 期 10, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ph15101216

关键词

magnetoelectric; T-2-contrast; fluorescent nanoparticle; cobalt ferrite; silica shell; ON-Demand drug delivery; stimuli responsive drug delivery; doxorubicin; off-target toxicity

资金

  1. Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute [CTSI-PDT: 373037-31005-FY19CTSIK]
  2. American Cancer Society [ACS IRG-17-182-04, ACS IRG-17-182-04-2]
  3. Notre Dame Berthiaume Institute for Precision Health [372333-31025]
  4. Berthiaume Institute for Precision Health research initiative at the University of Notre Dame [372717-43310-FY17RFP]
  5. Woodward Family Endowment for Excellence in NDnano Undergraduate Research
  6. NDNano Undergraduate Research Fellowship [NURF'19, NURF'20]
  7. Da Vinci Undergraduate Fellowship'19

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study aims to use magneto-electric silica nanoparticles as carriers to deliver Doxorubicin to cancer cells and eliminate off-target toxicity. The findings show that the carriers are biocompatible and can successfully kill cancer cells without harming blood vessel cells.
There is a need to improve current cancer treatment regimens to reduce systemic toxicity, to positively impact the quality-of-life post-treatment. We hypothesized the negation of off-target toxicity of anthracyclines (e.g., Doxorubicin) by delivering Doxorubicin on magneto-electric silica nanoparticles (Dox-MagSiNs) to cancer cells. Dox-MagSiNs were completely biocompatible with all cell types and are therapeutically inert till the release of Doxorubicin from the MagSiNs at the cancer cells location. The MagSiNs themselves are comprised of biocompatible components with a magnetostrictive cobalt ferrite core (4-6 nm) surrounded by a piezoelectric fused silica shell of 1.5 nm to 2 nm thickness. The MagSiNs possess T-2-MRI contrast properties on par with RESOVIST (TM) due to their cobalt ferrite core. Additionally, the silica shell surrounding the core was volume loaded with green or red fluorophores to fluorescently track the MagSiNs in vitro. This makes the MagSiNs a suitable candidate for trackable, drug nanocarriers. We used metastatic triple-negative breast cancer cells (MDAMB231), ovarian cancer cells (A2780), and prostate cancer cells (PC3) as our model cancer cell lines. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were used as control cell lines to represent blood-vessel cells that suffer from the systemic toxicity of Doxorubicin. In the presence of an external magnetic field that is 300x times lower than an MRI field, we successfully nanoporated the cancer cells, then triggered the release of 500 nM of doxorubicin from Dox-MagSiNs to successfully kill >50% PC3, >50% A2780 cells, and killed 125% more MDAMB231 cells than free Dox.HCl. In control HUVECs, the Dox-MagSiNs did not nanoporate into the HUVECS and did not exhibited any cytotoxicity at all when there was no triggered release of Dox.HCl. Currently, the major advantages of our approach are, (i) the MagSiNs are biocompatible in vitro and in vivo; (ii) the label-free nanoporation of Dox-MagSiNs into cancer cells and not the model blood vessel cell line; (iii) the complete cancellation of the cytotoxicity of Doxorubicin in the Dox-MagSiNs form; (iv) the clinical impact of such a nanocarrier will be that it will be possible to increase the current upper limit for cumulative-dosages of anthracyclines through multiple dosing, which in turn will improve the anti-cancer efficacy of anthracyclines.

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