Transformable liquid-metal nanomedicine

Yue Lü(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Quanyin Hu(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Yiliang Lin(North Carolina State University), Dennis B. Pacardo(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Chao Wang(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Wujin Sun(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Frances S. Ligler(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Michael D. Dickey(North Carolina State University), Zhen Gu(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Nature Communications
December 2, 2015
Cited by 584Open Access
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Abstract

To date, numerous inorganic nanocarriers have been explored for drug delivery systems (DDSs). However, the clinical application of inorganic formulations has often been hindered by their toxicity and failure to biodegrade. We describe here a transformable liquid-metal nanomedicine, based on a core-shell nanosphere composed of a liquid-phase eutectic gallium-indium core and a thiolated polymeric shell. This formulation can be simply produced through a sonication-mediated method with bioconjugation flexibility. The resulting nanoparticles loaded with doxorubicin (Dox) have an average diameter of 107 nm and demonstrate the capability to fuse and subsequently degrade under a mildly acidic condition, which facilitates release of Dox in acidic endosomes after cellular internalization. Equipped with hyaluronic acid, a tumour-targeting ligand, this formulation displays enhanced chemotherapeutic inhibition towards the xenograft tumour-bearing mice. This liquid metal-based DDS with fusible and degradable behaviour under physiological conditions provides a new strategy for engineering theranostic agents with low toxicity.


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