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Biological Fate Tracking of Nitric Oxide-Propelled Microneedle Delivery System Using an Aggregation-Caused Quenching Probe.

Ziyao ChangYuhuan WuYangyan ChenXuequn BaiTingting PengChuanbin WuXin PanZhengwei Huang
Published in: Molecular pharmaceutics (2024)
Nanoparticle-loaded dissolving microneedles (DMNs) have attracted increasing attention due to their ability to provide high drug loading, adjustable drug release behavior, and enhanced therapeutic efficiency. However, such delivery systems still face unsatisfied drug delivery efficiency due to insufficient driving force to promote nanoparticle penetration and the lack of in vivo fate studies to guide formulation design. Herein, an aggregation-caused quenching (ACQ) probe (P4) was encapsulated in l-arginine (l-Arg)-based nanomicelles, which was further formulated into nitric oxide (NO)-propelled nanomicelle-integrated DMNs (P4/l-Arg NMs@DMNs) to investigate their biological fate. The P4 probe could emit intense fluorescence signals in intact nanomicelles, while quenching with the dissociation of nanomicelles, providing a "distinguishable" method for tracking the fate of nanomicelles at a different status. l-Arg was demonstrated to self-generate NO under the tumor microenvironment with excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS), providing a pneumatic force to promote the penetration of nanomicelles in both three-dimensional (3D)-cultured tumor cells and melanoma-bearing mice. Compared with passive microneedles (P4 NMs@DMNs) without a NO propellant, the P4/l-Arg NMs@DMNs possessed a good NO production performance and higher nanoparticle penetration capacity. In conclusion, this study offered an ACQ probe-based biological fate tracking approach to demonstrate the potential of NO-propelled nanoparticle-loaded DMNs in penetration enhancement for topical tumor therapy.
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