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A Ruthenium Nitrosyl-Functionalized Magnetic Nanoplatform with Near-Infrared Light-Controlled Nitric Oxide Delivery and Photothermal Effect for Enhanced Antitumor and Antibacterial Therapy.

Ya-Ting YuShu-Wen ShiYi WangQian-Ling ZhangShu-Hong GaoShi-Ping YangJin-Gang Liu
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Developing a spatiotemporal-controlled nitric oxide (NO) delivery nanoplatform is highly desirable for its biological applications as a tumor inhibitor and antibacterial agent. In this study, a novel multifunctional magnetic nanoplatform {Fe3O4@PDA@Ru-NO@FA} (1) was developed for the near-infrared (NIR) light-controlled release of NO in which a ruthenium nitrosyl (Ru-NO) donor and a folic acid (FA)-directing group were covalently functionalized onto Fe3O4@PDA. Nanoplatform 1 preferentially accumulated in folate receptor-overexpressing cancer cell lines and magnetic field-guided tumor tissue, instantly released NO, and simultaneously produced a prominent photothermal effect upon 808 nm NIR light irradiation, leading to remarkable in vitro and in vivo antitumor efficacy. When nanoplatform 1 was treated only once, the potential MRI contrast agent was sufficient to significantly inhibit or eliminate the tumor tissues in living mice, thus offering opportunities for future NO-involved multimodal cancer therapy. In addition, a NO delivery nanoplatform {Fe3O4@PDA@Ru-NO} was imbedded in the matrix of a chitosan (CS)-poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) material to develop a hybrid thermosensitive CS-PVA/NO hydrogel. The CS-PVA/NO hydrogels demonstrated mild (<150 mW cm-2) NIR light-controlled NO delivery and thus produced an efficient antibacterial effect for both Gram-negative Escherichia coli and Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus. Therefore, these hydrogels have potential as antibacterial dressings for wound bacterial infection treatment.
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