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Infrared Responsive Choline Phosphate Lipids for Synergistic Cancer Therapy.

Sangni JiangWenliang WangLihua DongXinxin YanShengran LiWeikang MeiXintao XieYuanhua ZhangSanrong LiuXifei Yu
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2021)
Choline phosphate lipids have been designed and developed as new-generation zwitterionic nanocarriers with excellent biocompatibility and bioorthogonality to provide a more programmable performance for cancer therapy. However, there is a lack of spatiotemporal and reversible control for drug release at target tumor cells, which can lead to severe adverse effects to normal tissue and discounted treatment outcome. Here, light-inducible Lip-cRGDfk/ICG/Dox liposomes were developed for synergistic cancer therapy. ICG can effectively convert light energy into selective heating in a local environment upon laser irradiation, thus inducing thermal ablation of tumor cells, and further reversibly trigger the spatiotemporal release of anticancer drugs (Dox) at tumor cells due to the conformation transformation of CP lipids to synergistically kill tumor cells. That Lip-cRGDfk/ICG/Dox exhibited a significant improvement for breast cancer therapy in vitro and in vivo is also demonstrated, thus it can serve as an efficient platform to noninvasively and spatiotemporally control the activation of cytotoxicity at tumor cells for precision cancer therapy.
Keyphrases
  • cancer therapy
  • drug delivery
  • drug release
  • fluorescence imaging
  • fatty acid
  • high throughput
  • early onset
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • drug induced
  • radiation induced