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Zwitterionic Unimolecular Micelles with pH and Temperature Response: Enhanced In Vivo Circulation Stability and Tumor Therapeutic Efficiency.

Wenwen LiuJunjie LiZhihui QinMengmeng YaoXinlu TianZhiming ZhangLi ZhangQin GuoLinhua ZhangDunwan ZhuFanglian Yao
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2020)
Circulation stability in vivo and stimuli-responsiveness under a tumor microenvironment of the polymeric prodrug micellar drug delivery systems are very critical to improve the tumor therapeutic efficiency. In this study, a series of polyamidoamine (PAMAM)-graft-poly(2-(diethylamino) ethyl methacrylate) (PDEAEMA)-block-poly(betaine sulfonate) (PSBMA) (PDS) unimolecular micelles were prepared via atom transfer radical polymerization. PAMAM served as a hydrophobic core to load the drug, the PDMAEMA segment was a middle layer to provide both thermo- and pH-sensitivity, whereas the PSMBA shell layer was used to improve the stability of the unimolecular micelles. The PDS exhibited a spherical structure with the size of 10-20 nm at pH 7.4. PDS micelles had excellent stability to resist the large volume liquid dilution. Moreover, it exhibited excellent stability in a complex biological microenvironment because of a superhigh antiprotein adhesion capacity of the PSBMA shell layer compared with PAMAM micelles. Drug release studies confirmed that the DOX can remain in the PDS micelles at pH 7.4 and 37 °C, whereas it can rapidly be released when the pH decreases to 5.0 and/or the temperature increases to 40 °C. In vitro studies suggested that the PDS drug delivery system can effectivity induce apoptosis and inhibit the proliferation of cancer cells. In vivo studies suggested that the PDS micelles prolonged the circulation time, decreased the side effects, and increased the antitumor efficacy. Therefore, the prepared PDS micelles are a potential anticancer drug delivery carrier for cancer therapy.
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