Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles as Adjuvant To Facilitate
Doxorubicin Intracellular Accumulation and Visualize pH-Responsive
Release for Overcoming Drug Resistance
posted on 2016-04-12, 00:00authored byJuan Liu, Xiaowei Ma, Shubin Jin, Xiangdong Xue, Chunqiu Zhang, Tuo Wei, Weisheng Guo, Xing-Jie Liang
Multidrug resistance (MDR) of cancer
is a challenge to effective
chemotherapeutic interventions. The stimulus-responsive drug delivery
system (DDS) based on nanotechnology provides a promising approach
to overcome MDR. Through the development of a doxorubicin delivery
system based on zinc oxide nanomaterials, we have demonstrated that
MDR in breast cancer cell line can be significantly circumvented by
a combination of efficient cellular uptake and a pH-triggered rapid
drug release due to degradation of nanocarriers in acidic environment.
Doxorubicin and zinc oxide nanoparticles, compared with free doxorubicin,
effectively enhanced the intracellular drug concentration by simultaneously
increasing cell uptake and decreasing cell efflux in MDR cancer cells.
The acidic environment-triggered release of drug can be tracked real-time
by the doxorubicin fluorescence recovery from its quenched state.
Therefore, with the combination of therapeutic potential and the capacity
to track release of drug in cancer cells, our system holds great potential
in nanomedicine by serving dual roles of overcoming drug resistance
and tracking intracellular drug release from the DDS.