14 research outputs found

    Iodinated Photosensitizing Chitosan: Self-Assembly into Tumor-Homing Nanoparticles with Enhanced Singlet Oxygen Generation

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    A novel iodinated chitosan-backboned conjugate (GC–I–Ce6) was designed and prepared to fabricate self-assembled biopolymeric nanoparticles with heavy atom-effected enhanced singlet oxygen generation as well as biological merits. The heavy atom-rich nature of the hydrophobic particle interior was characterized with X-ray absorption and the modified photophysical properties of a chemically embedded photosensitizer, chlorin e6 (Ce6). From the comparative spectroscopic studies as well as cellular and animal experiments, it has been shown that the self-assembled GC–I–Ce6 nanoparticles have enhanced capability of singlet oxygen generation by the intraparticle heavy-atom effect, along with high tumor targetability in vitro and in vivo thanks to the glycol chitosan-surfaced exterior with biocompatible, positively charged and tumor-homing characteristics. Actual efficacy improvement in the photodynamic therapy of a human breast cancer cell line (MDA-MB-231) demonstrates potential of our photophysically and pharmaceutically motivated hybrid bioconjugate approach for nanomedicine applications

    DNA Amplification in Neutral Liposomes for Safe and Efficient Gene Delivery

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    In general, traditional gene carriers contain strong cationic charges to efficiently load anionic genes, but this cationic character also leads to destabilization of plasma membranes and causes severe cytotoxicity. Here, we developed a PCR-based nanofactory as a safe gene delivery system. A few template plasmid DNA can be amplified by PCR inside liposomes about 200 nm in diameter, and the quantity of loaded genes highly increased by more than 8.8-fold. The liposome membrane was composed of neutral lipids free from cationic charges. Consequently, this system is nontoxic, unlike other traditional cationic gene carriers. Intense red fluorescent protein (RFP) expression in CHO-K1 cells showed that the amplified genes could be successfully transfected to cells. Animal experiments with the luciferase gene also showed <i>in vivo</i> gene expression by our system without toxicity. We think that this PCR-based nanofactory system can overcome the toxicity problem that is the critical limitation of current gene delivery to clinical application

    Tumor-Targeting Transferrin Nanoparticles for Systemic Polymerized siRNA Delivery in Tumor-Bearing Mice

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    Transferrin (TF) is widely used as a tumor-targeting ligand for the delivery of anticancer drugs because the TF receptor is overexpressed on the surface of various fast-growing cancer cells. In this article, we report on TF nanoparticles as an siRNA delivery carrier for in vivo tumor-specific gene silencing. To produce siRNA carrying TF nanoparticles (NPs), both TF and siRNA were chemically modified with sulfhydryl groups that can build up self-cross-linked siRNA-TF NPs. Self-polymerized 5′-end thiol-modified siRNA (poly siRNA, psi) and thiolated transferrin (tTF) were spontaneously cross-linked to form stable NPs (psi-tTF NPs) under optimized conditions, and they could be reversibly degraded to release functional monomeric siRNA molecules under reductive conditions. Receptor-mediated endocytosis of TF induced rapid tumor-cell-specific uptake of the psi-tTF NPs, and the internalized NPs resulted in a downregulation of the target protein in red-fluorescent-protein-expressing melanoma cancer cells (RFP/B16F10) with negligible cytotoxicity. After systemic administration, the psi-tTF NPs showed marked accumulation at the tumor, leading to successful target-gene silencing in vivo. This psi-tTF NP system provided a safe and effective strategy for in vivo systemic siRNA delivery for cancer therapy

    Smart Nanocarrier Based on PEGylated Hyaluronic Acid for Cancer Therapy

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    Tumor targetability and site-specific drug release of therapeutic nanoparticles are key factors for effective cancer therapy. In this study, poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-conjugated hyaluronic acid nanoparticles (P-HA-NPs) were investigated as carriers for anticancer drugs including doxorubicin and camptothecin (CPT). P-HA-NPs were internalized into cancer cells (SCC7 and MDA-MB-231) via receptor-mediated endocytosis, but were rarely taken up by normal fibroblasts (NIH-3T3). During in vitro drug release tests, P-HA-NPs rapidly released drugs when incubated with cancer cells, extracts of tumor tissues, or the enzyme Hyal-1, which is abundant in the intracellular compartments of cancer cells. CPT-loaded P-HA-NPs (CPT-P-HA-NPs) showed dose-dependent cytotoxicity to cancer cells (MDA-MB-231, SCC7, and HCT 116) and significantly lower cytotoxicity against normal fibroblasts (NIH-3T3) than free CPT. Unexpectedly, high concentrations of CPT-P-HA-NPs demonstrated greater cytotoxicity to cancer cells than free CPT. An in vivo biodistribution study indicated that P-HA-NPs selectively accumulated into tumor sites after systemic administration into tumor-bearing mice, primarily due to prolonged circulation in the blood and binding to a receptor (CD44) that was overexpressed on the cancer cells. In addition, when CPT-P-HA-NPs were systemically administrated into tumor-bearing mice, we saw no significant increases in tumor size for at least 35 days, implying high antitumor activity. Overall, P-HA-NPs showed promising potential as a drug carrier for cancer therapy

    Ketal Cross-Linked Poly(ethylene glycol)-Poly(amino acid)s Copolymer Micelles for Efficient Intracellular Delivery of Doxorubicin

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    A biocompatible, robust polymer micelle bearing pH-hydrolyzable shell cross-links was developed for efficient intracellular delivery of doxorubicin (DOX). The rationally designed triblock copolymer of poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(l-aspartic acid)-poly(l-phenylalanine) (PEG-PAsp-PPhe) self-assembled to form polymer micelles with three distinct domains of the PEG outer corona, the PAsp middle shell, and the PPhe inner core. Shell cross-linking was performed by the reaction of ketal-containing cross-linkers with Asp moieties in the middle shells. The shell cross-linking did not change the micelle size and the spherical morphology. Fluorescence quenching experiments confirmed the formation of shell cross-linked diffusion barrier, as judged by the reduced Stern−Volmer quenching constant (KSV). Dynamic light scattering and fluorescence spectroscopy experiments showed that shell cross-linking improved the micellar physical stability even in the presence of micelle disrupting surfactants, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). The hydrolysis kinetics study showed that the hydrolysis half-life (t1/2) of ketal cross-links was estimated to be 52 h at pH 7.4, whereas 0.7 h at pH 5.0, indicating the 74-fold faster hydrolysis at endosomal pH. Ketal cross-linked micelles showed the rapid DOX release at endosomal pH, compared to physiological pH. Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) showed that ketal cross-linked micelles were taken up by the MCF-7 breast cancer cells via endocytosis and transferred into endosomes to hydrolyze the cross-links by lowered pH and finally facilitate the DOX release to inhibit proliferation of cancer cells. This ketal cross-linked polymer micelle is promising for enhanced intracellular delivery efficiency of many hydrophobic anticancer drugs

    Tumor Targeting Chitosan Nanoparticles for Dual-Modality Optical/MR Cancer Imaging

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    We report tumor targeting nanoparticles for optical/MR dual imaging based on self-assembled glycol chitosan to be a potential multimodal imaging probe. To develop an optical/MR dual imaging probe, biocompatible and water-soluble glycol chitosan (Mw = 50 kDa) were chemically modified with 5β-cholanic acid (CA), resulting in amphiphilic glycol chitosan-5β-cholanic acid conjugates (GC-CA). For optical imaging near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) dye, Cy5.5, was conjugated to GC-CA resulting in Cy5-labeled GC-CA conjugates (Cy5.5-GC-CA). Moreover, in order to chelate gadolinium (Gd(III)) in the Cy5.5-GC-CA conjugates, 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid (DOTA) was directly conjugated in Cy5.5-GC-CA. Finally, the excess GdCl3 was added to DOTA modified Cy5.5-GC-CA conjugates in distilled water (pH 5.5). The freshly prepared Gd(III) encapsulated Cy5.5-GC-CA conjugates were spontaneously self-assembled into stable Cy5.5 labeled and Gd(III) encapsulated chitosan nanoparticles (Cy5.5-CNP-Gd(III)). The Cy5.5-CNP-Gd(III) was spherical in shape and approximately 350 nm in size. From the cellular experiment, it was demonstrated that Cy5.5-CNP-Gd(III) were efficiently taken up and distributed in cytoplasm (NIRF filter; red). When the Cy5.5-GC-Gd(III) were systemically administrated into the tail vein of tumor-bearing mice, large amounts of nanoparticles were successfully localized within the tumor, which was confirmed by noninvasive near-infrared fluorescence and MR imaging system simultaneously. These results revealed that the dual-modal imaging probe of Cy5.5-CNP-Gd(III) has the potential to be used as an optical/MR dual imaging agent for cancer treatment

    Real Time, High Resolution Video Imaging of Apoptosis in Single Cells with a Polymeric Nanoprobe

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    We report a new apoptosis nanoprobe (Apo-NP) designed on the basis of a polymer nanoparticle platform. This simple one-step technique is capable of boosting fluorescence signals upon apoptosis in living cells, enabling real-time imaging of apoptosis in single cells and in vivo. The Apo-NP efficiently delivers chemically labeled, dual-quenched caspase-3-sensitive fluorogenic peptides into cells, allowing caspase-3-dependent strong fluorescence amplification to be imaged in apoptotic cells in real-time and at high resolution. The design platform of the Apo-NP is flexible and can be fine-tuned for a wide array of applications such as identification of caspase-related apoptosis in pathologies and for monitoring therapeutic efficacy of apoptotic drugs in cancer treatment

    Real Time, High Resolution Video Imaging of Apoptosis in Single Cells with a Polymeric Nanoprobe

    No full text
    We report a new apoptosis nanoprobe (Apo-NP) designed on the basis of a polymer nanoparticle platform. This simple one-step technique is capable of boosting fluorescence signals upon apoptosis in living cells, enabling real-time imaging of apoptosis in single cells and in vivo. The Apo-NP efficiently delivers chemically labeled, dual-quenched caspase-3-sensitive fluorogenic peptides into cells, allowing caspase-3-dependent strong fluorescence amplification to be imaged in apoptotic cells in real-time and at high resolution. The design platform of the Apo-NP is flexible and can be fine-tuned for a wide array of applications such as identification of caspase-related apoptosis in pathologies and for monitoring therapeutic efficacy of apoptotic drugs in cancer treatment

    Real Time, High Resolution Video Imaging of Apoptosis in Single Cells with a Polymeric Nanoprobe

    No full text
    We report a new apoptosis nanoprobe (Apo-NP) designed on the basis of a polymer nanoparticle platform. This simple one-step technique is capable of boosting fluorescence signals upon apoptosis in living cells, enabling real-time imaging of apoptosis in single cells and in vivo. The Apo-NP efficiently delivers chemically labeled, dual-quenched caspase-3-sensitive fluorogenic peptides into cells, allowing caspase-3-dependent strong fluorescence amplification to be imaged in apoptotic cells in real-time and at high resolution. The design platform of the Apo-NP is flexible and can be fine-tuned for a wide array of applications such as identification of caspase-related apoptosis in pathologies and for monitoring therapeutic efficacy of apoptotic drugs in cancer treatment
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