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A Near-Infrared Laser-Triggered Size-Shrinkable Nanosystem with In Situ Drug Release for Deep Tumor Penetration.

Authors :
Wu D
Xu S
Zhang X
Li Y
Zhang W
Yan Q
Yang Q
Guo F
Yang G
Source :
ACS applied materials & interfaces [ACS Appl Mater Interfaces] 2021 Apr 14; Vol. 13 (14), pp. 16036-16047. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Mar 18.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The development of smart size-tunable drug delivery nanoplatform enables the solving of the paradox of inconsistent size-dependence of high tumor accumulation and deep penetration during its delivery process, thus achieving superior cancer treatment efficacy. Herein, we report a size-shrinkable nanomicelle complex system with an initial size of 101 nm enabling effective retention around the tumor periphery and could destruct to ultrasmall nanomicelles triggered by a near-infrared (NIR) laser to realize the deep tumor penetration. The nanomicelle system is consisted of an upper critical solution temperature (UCST)-type block copolymer poly(acrylamide-acrylonitrile)-polyethylene glycol-lipoic acid (p(AAm- co -AN)- g -PEG-LA) encapsulating gold nanorods. Upon the irradiation of the NIR laser at the tumor site, gold nanorods could convert the light energy to heat energy, realizing the photothermal ablation of superficial tumor tissue. Concurrently, the large micelles split into a cascade of ultrasmall micelles (∼7 nm), which could easily penetrate into the deep site of the tumor and achieve the in situ "on-demand" release of the loaded drug to exert superior combined photothermal-chemotherapy of cancer. By the precise manipulation of laser, the micelle complex system realized the hierarchical killing from the superficial-to-deep tumor and achieved almost complete tumor growth inhibition on the established xenograft liver tumor mice model.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1944-8252
Volume :
13
Issue :
14
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ACS applied materials & interfaces
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33733732
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.1c00022