On-Demand Versatile Prodrug Nanomicelle for Tumor-Specific Bioimaging and Photothermal-Chemo Synergistic Cancer Therapy

Yujie Su(China Pharmaceutical University), Yuan Liu(China Pharmaceutical University), Xiangting Xu(China Pharmaceutical University), Jianping Zhou(China Pharmaceutical University), Lin Xu(China Pharmaceutical University), Xiaole Xu(China Pharmaceutical University), Dun Wang(Shenyang Pharmaceutical University), Min Li(China Pharmaceutical University), Kerong Chen(China Pharmaceutical University), Wei Wang(China Pharmaceutical University)
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
October 17, 2018
Cited by 50

Abstract

Photothermal therapy is a promising approach for antitumor application although regrettably restricted by available photothermal agents. Physical entrapment of organic near-infrared dyes into nanosystems was extensively studied to reverse the dilemma. However, problems still remained, such as drug bursting and leakage. We developed here an amphiphilic prodrug conjugate by chemically modifying indocyanine green derivative (ICG-COOH) and paclitaxel (PTX) to hyaluronic acid (HA) backbone for integration of photothermal-chemotherapy and specific tumor imaging. The prepared ICG-HA-PTX conjugates could self-assemble into nanomicelles to improve the stability and reduce systemic toxicity of the therapeutic agents. The high local concentration of ICG-COOH in nanomicelles resulted in fluorescence self-quenching, leading to no fluorescence signal being detected in circulation. When the nanomicelles reached the tumor site via electron paramagnetic resonance effect and HA-mediated active targeting, the overexpressed esterase in tumor cells ruptured the ester linkage between drugs and HA, achieving tumor-targeted therapy and specific imaging. A series of in vitro and in vivo experiments demonstrated that the easily prepared ICG- HA-PTX nanomicelles with high stability, smart release behavio r, and excellent tumor targeting ability showed formidable synergy in tumor inhibition, which provided new thoughts in developing an organic near-infrared-dye-based multifunctional delivery system for tumor theranostics.


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