Cancer has become a major cause of
human death in many countries.
Generally, chemotherapy is the main treatment for cancer, but it may
kill both cancerous cells as well as normal cells that cause serious
side effects in the patient due to lack of specific targeting for
cancerous cells. In order to achieve better efficiency in the cancer
treatment, the development of targeted drug delivery platform has
been a goal for a long time. Herein, we constructed folic acid decorated
azide functionalized biocompatible mesoporous silica nanoparticles
(MSNPs) to target tumor cells through folate receptor (FR), a widely
expressed receptor in cancer cells. In colon and ovarian cancer cells,
high endogenous H2S levels are found. They can be used
as a trigger for the azide reduction, which leads to the cleavage
of ester linkage and results in DOX release from MSNP nanocarriers.
Additionally, confocal cell images of HCT-116, HT-29, A2780, SKOV3,
and HeLa cells treated with nanoparticles revealed an effective internalization
of MSNPs in these cells. Interestingly, DOX-loaded MSNP-N3-FA-treated HT-29 cells showed a significant decrease in the cell
viability, whereas, there was no substantial change in HeLa cells.
We also demonstrated that DOX-loaded MSNP-N3-FA has superior
in vivo chemotherapy efficacy compared to free DOX. These observations
indicated that the designed nanocarriers on MSNP-N3-FA
specifically respond in the presence of H2S. MSNP-N3-FA is the first potential
nanocarrier for endogenous H2S-based efficient DOX release
for colon and ovarian cancers.