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Boron phenyl alanine targeted chitosan-PNIPAAm core-shell thermo-responsive nanoparticles: boosting drug delivery to glioblastoma in BNCT.

Monireh SoleimanbeigiFatemeh DoustiFarshid HassanzadehMina MirianJaleh VarshosazYaser KasesazMahboubeh Rostami
Published in: Drug development and industrial pharmacy (2022)
Boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) is one of the best treatment modalities for glioblastoma multiform that could selectively kill the tumor cells. To be successful in BNCT, it is crucial to have enough 10 B in the tumor. l-boron phenylalanine (l-BPA) targeted thermo-responsive core-shell nanoparticles (NPs) of chitosan-poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm) were our idea for endocytosis via sialic acid receptors, and selective delivery of 10 B to glial cells. Methotrexate (MTX) was chosen as a model drug for evaluating the efficacy of NPs in tumor cells, and BPA was selected for BNCT purposes. The polymeric conjugates were synthesized and the chemical structures were approved by spectroscopic methods (FTIR, 1 H NMR, and 11 B NMR). Cargos were loaded efficiently (>95%) in the prepared NPs, and the release profile of MTX and BPA was studied around the lower critical solution temperature (LCST; about 39 °C). The loaded drugs were released quantitatively at the LCST, while almost no drug was released at 37 °C. The prepared NPs did not show considerable hemolysis ratio (<2%) and were still safe when loaded BPA, on U87MG cells. The MTX loaded NPs showed lower IC 50 (30.78 µg/mL) than the free MTX (37.03 µg/mL) in MTT assay, and targeted NPs had the lowest IC 50 s in U87MG cell lines (27.35 µg/mL). Targeted BPA@CSSU-PNI NPs were uptaken better than the non-targeted ones by U87MG cells, and CR-39 assay showed the boron content efficiency for further applications in BNCT. This study's results introduce novel targeted thermo-responsive NPs for treating glioblastoma using BNCT.
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