Engineered Stable Bioactive Per Se Amphiphilic Phosphorus Dendron Nanomicelles as a Highly Efficient Drug Delivery System To Take Down Breast Cancer In Vivo.
Liang ChenLiu CaoMengsi ZhanJin LiDayuan WangRégis LaurentSerge M MignaniAnne-Marie CaminadeJean-Pierre MajoralXiangyang ShiPublished in: Biomacromolecules (2022)
Conventional small molecular chemical drugs always have challenging limitations in cancer therapy due to their high systemic toxicity and low therapeutic efficacy. Nanotechnology has been applied in drug delivery, bringing new promising potential to realize effective cancer treatment. In this context, we develop here a new nanomicellar drug delivery platform generated by amphiphilic phosphorus dendrons (1-C17G3.HCl), which could form micelles for effective encapsulation of a hydrophobic anticancer drug doxorubicin (DOX) with a high drug loading content (42.4%) and encapsulation efficiency (96.7%). Owing to the unique dendritic rigid structure and surface hydrophilic groups, large steady void space of micelles can be created for drug encapsulation. The created DOX-loaded micelles with a mean diameter of 26.3 nm have good colloidal stability. Strikingly, we show that the drug-free micelles possess good intrinsic anticancer activity and act collectively with DOX to take down breast cancer cells in vitro and the xenografted tumor model in vivo through upregulation of Bax, PTEN, and p53 proteins for enhanced cell apoptosis. Meanwhile, the resulting 1-C17G3.HCl@DOX micelles significantly abolish the toxicity relevant to the free drug. The findings of this study demonstrate a unique nanomicelle-based drug delivery system created with the self-assembling amphiphilic phosphorus dendrons that may be adapted for chemotherapy of different cancer types.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- cancer therapy
- drug release
- highly efficient
- cell proliferation
- drug induced
- adverse drug
- breast cancer cells
- oxidative stress
- squamous cell carcinoma
- emergency department
- signaling pathway
- ionic liquid
- induced apoptosis
- locally advanced
- optical coherence tomography
- optic nerve
- pi k akt
- rectal cancer
- tandem mass spectrometry
- papillary thyroid