In biomedical applications, polyethylene glycol (PEG) functionalization has been a major approach to modify nanocarriers such as nano-graphene oxide for particular biological requirements. However, incorporation of a PEG shell poses a significant diffusion barrier that adversely affects the release of the loaded drugs. This study addresses this critical issue by employing a redox-responsive PEG detachment mechanism. A PEGylated nano-graphene oxide (NGO-SS-mPEG) with redox-responsive detachable PEG shell is developed that can rapidly release an encapsulated payload at tumor-relevant glutathione (GSH) levels. The PEG shell grafted onto NGO sheets gives the nanocomposite high physiological solubility and stability in circulation. It can selectively detach from NGO upon intracellular GSH stimulation. The surface-engineered structures are shown to accelerate the release of doxorubicin hydrochloride (DXR) from NGO-SS-mPEG 1.55 times faster than in the absence of GSH. Confocal microscopy shows clear evidence of NGO-SS-mPEG endocytosis in HeLa cells, mainly accumulated in cytoplasm. Furthermore, upon internalization of DXR-loaded NGO with a disulfide-linked PEG shell into HeLa cells, DXR is effectively released in the presence of an elevated GSH reducing environment, as observed in confocal microscopy and flow cytometric experiments. Importantly, inhibition of cell proliferation is directly correlated with increased intracellular GSH concentrations due to rapid DXR release.
Cell membrane coated nanoparticles have been designed for inflammation and cancer therapy. An array of cell membranes from cell library were extracted and leveraged to coat a variety of nanoparticles for different diseases.
Hybrid mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs), which were synthesized using the co-condensation method and engineered with unique redox-responsive gatekeepers, were developed for studying the glutathione-mediated controlled release. These hybrid nanoparticles constitute a mesoporous silica core that can accommodate the guests (i.e., drug, dye) and the PEG shell that can be connected with the core via disulfide-linker. Interestingly, the PEG shell can be selectively detached from the inner core at tumor-relevant glutathione (GSH) levels and facilitate the release of the encapsulated guests at a controlled manner. The structure of the resulting hybrid nanoparticles (MSNs-SS-mPEG) was comprehensively characterized by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), and nitrogen adsorption/desorption isotherms analysis. The disulfide-linked PEG chains anchored on MSNs could serve as efficient gatekeepers to control the on-off of the pores. Compared with no GSH, fluorescein dye as the model drug loaded into MSNs showed rapid release in 10 mM GSH, indicating the accelerated release after the opening of the pores regulated by GSH. Confocal microscopy images showed a clear evidence of the dye-loaded MSNs-SS-mPEG nanoparticles endocytosis into MCF-7 cells and releasing guest molecules from the pore inside cells. Moreover, in vitro cell viability test using MTT assay indicated that MSNs-SS-mPEG nanoparticles had no obvious cytotoxicity. These results indicate that MSNs-SS-mPEG nanoparticles can be used in the biomedical field.
The synthesis and biological efficacy of novel nanomicelles that rapidly disassemble and release their encapsulated payload intracellularly under tumor-relevant glutathione (GSH) levels are reported. The unique design includes a PEG-sheddable shell and poly(ε-benzyloxycarbonyl-l-lysine) core with a redox-sensitive disulfide linkage.
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