Hypoxia-Responsive Polyprodrug Nanocarriers for Near-Infrared Light-Boosted Photodynamic Chemotherapy.
Debabrata DuttaQinghao ZhouJean Felix MukerabigwiNannan LuZhishen GePublished in: Biomacromolecules (2021)
The hypoxia environment inside tumors is tightly associated with tumor growth, metastasis, and drug resistance. However, the heterogonous distribution of hypoxic areas limits the efficacy of hypoxia-activatable drug delivery systems. Herein, we report the hypoxia-activable block copolymer polyprodrugs, which are composed of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) and copolymerized segments of ortho-nitrobenzyl-linked camptothecin (CPT) methacrylate and 2-(piperidin-1-yl)ethyl methacrylate (PEMA) monomers. After self-assembly in aqueous solution, indocyanine green (ICG) photosensitizers were encapsulated to formulate ICG-loaded micellar nanoparticles (ICG@CPTNB) for near-infrared (NIR) light-boosted photodynamic therapy (PDT), tumor hypoxia aggravation, and responsive drug activation. Through intravenous injection and prolonged blood circulation, the nanoparticles can accumulate into tumor efficiently. Tumor acidity-triggered charge transition of PEMA units remarkably promotes cellular internalization of the nanoparticles. Upon exposure to NIR laser irradiation, ICG inside the nanoparticles produced reactive oxygen species (ROS) along with local hypothermia. Simultaneously, the oxygen consumption during ROS production aggravated the intratumoral hypoxia, which amplified hypoxia-responsive self-immolative CPT release from the nanoparticles. The combined photodynamic chemotherapy using hypoxia-responsive polyprodrug nanoparticles, ICG@CPTNB, overcomes the limitations of single therapy of hypoxia-activable prodrugs or PDT, which remarkably improves the efficiency of tumor growth suppression.