Tirapazamine (TPZ) and its derivatives
(TPZD) have shown their
great potential for efficiently killing hypoxic cancer cells. However,
unsatisfactory clinical outcomes resulting from the low bioavailability
of the low-molecular TPZ and TPZD limited their further applications.
Precise delivery and release of these prodrugs via functional nanocarriers
can significantly improve the therapeutic effects due to the targeted
drug delivery and enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect.
Herein, zwitterionic block copolymer (BCP) micelles with aldehyde
functional groups are prepared from the self-assembly of poly(2-methacryloyloxyethyl
phosphorylcholine-b-poly(di(ethylene glycol) methyl
ether methacrylate-co-4-formylphenyl methacrylate)
[PMPC-b-P(DEGMA-co-FPMA)]. TPZD
is then grafted onto PMPC-b-P(DEGMA-co-FPMA) to obtain a polymer-drug conjugate, PMPC-b-P(DEGMA-co-FPMA-g-TPZD) (BCP-TPZ),
through the formation of a pH-responsive imine bond, exhibiting a
pH-dependent drug release profile owing to the cleavage of the imine
bond under acidic conditions. Outstandingly, BCP-TPZ shows around
13.7-fold higher cytotoxicity to hypoxic cancer cells in comparison
to normoxic cancer cells evaluated through an in vitro cytotoxicity assay. The pH-responsiveness and hypoxia-specific cytotoxicity
confer BCP-TPZ micelles a great potential to achieve precise delivery
of TPZD and thus enhance the therapeutic effect toward tumor-hypoxia.