Fabrication of an Injectable Star-polylactide/Thiolated Hyaluronate Hydrogel as a Double Drug-Delivery System for Cancer Treatment.
Yifan ZhangMin FangZhiyi TanYu-Ang ZhangChun-Yu HuangLu LuJinhuan TianLihua LiChangren ZhouPublished in: ACS omega (2023)
Unsatisfactory solid-tumor penetration or rapid metabolism of nanomaterials limits their therapeutic efficacy. Here, we designed an injectable thiolated hyaluronate (HA-SH) hydrogel as a stable drug-releasing platform for in situ tumor treatment. Biodegradable star-shaped polylactide (S-PLLA) was first synthesized and fabricated to porous microspheres to encapsulate hydrophobic curcumin (Cur@S-PLLA), which was then blended with hydrophilic doxorubicin (Dox) and the HA-SH precursor to form composite in situ formable hydrogels [Cur@S-PLLA/(Dox)HA-SH]. The results showed that adding the microspheres improved the performance of the hydrogel, such as decreasing the gelation time from 1080 s to 960 s and also the swelling ratio. The mechanical strength increased from 27 to 45 kPa. In addition, the double drug system guaranteed a sustained release of drugs, releasing Dox at the early stage, with the continuous later release of Cur after gel swelling or S-PLLA degradation to achieve long-lasting tumor suppression, which inhibits the survival of cancer cells. The inhibitory effects of the hydrogels on MCF-7 were studied. The cell activity in the double-loaded hydrogel was significantly lower than that of the control groups, and apparent dead cells appeared in 2 days and fewer living cells with time. Flow cytometry revealed that the Cur@S-PLLA/(Dox)HA-SH group had the highest apoptosis ratio of 86.60% at 12 h, and the drugs caused the cell cycle to be blocked in phase M to reduce cell division. In summary, the innovative release platform is expected to be used in long-lasting tumor suppression and provides more ideas for the design of drug carriers.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- wound healing
- cell cycle
- early stage
- flow cytometry
- living cells
- single cell
- cancer therapy
- cell cycle arrest
- stem cells
- drug induced
- drug release
- emergency department
- induced apoptosis
- cell death
- adverse drug
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cell therapy
- high resolution
- radiation therapy
- lymph node
- molecularly imprinted
- computed tomography
- rectal cancer
- breast cancer cells
- combination therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells