posted on 2017-04-05, 00:00authored byYumin Zhang, Fan Huang, Chunhua Ren, Lijun Yang, Jianfeng Liu, Zhen Cheng, Liping Chu, Jinjian Liu
Chemo-photodynamic
combination therapy has been received widespread attention in cancer
treatment due to its excellent characteristics, such as reducing the
adverse side effects of chemo-drugs and improving the therapeutic
effects for various cancers. In this study, RGD and DOX was conjugated
to PEG by thiol–ene addition and Schiff’s base reaction,
respectively, to prepare the targeted and pH-sensitive antitumor prodrug
nanoparticles (RGD-PEG-DOX NPs, RGD-NPs). Subsequently, the photosensitizer
chlorin e6 (Ce6) was encapsulated into RGD-NPs, thus obtaining a simple
and efficient chemo-photodynamic combination platform (RGD-PEG-DOX/Ce6
NPs, RGD-NPs/Ce6). This nanoparticle possessed high drug loading property
of both the chemo-drug and photosensitizer and could simultaneously
release them under the mild acidic microenvironment of cancer cells,
which was expected to realize the synchronization therapy of chemotherapy
and photodynamic therapy (PDT). Compared with free DOX and Ce6, RGD-NPs/Ce6
could significantly improve the cellular uptake capacities of DOX
and Ce6, resulting in the increased contents of ROS in cancer cells
and effective cytotoxicity for tumor cells (MDA-MB-231 cells and MCF-7
cells) upon a laser radiation. The in vivo experiment showed that
RGD-NPs/Ce6 displayed superior tumor targeting, accumulation, and
retention ability than the other groups (free DOX, free Ce6 and NPs/Ce6),
and thus significantly enhancing the antitumor effect in vivo with
a laser radiation. In addition, the cardiotoxicity induced by DOX
was thoroughly wiped out after being loaded and delivered by the nanoparticles
according to the pathological analysis. Therefore, the targeted chemo-photodynamic
combination therapeutic platform may be a promising candidate for
enhanced cancer therapy.