A tumor is a complicated
system, and tumor cells are typically
heterogeneous in many aspects. Polymeric drug delivery nanocarriers
sensitive to a single type of biosignals may not release cargos effectively
in all tumor cells, leading to low therapeutic efficacy. To address
the challenges, here, we demonstrated a pH/reduction dual-sensitive
charge-conversional polymeric prodrug strategy for efficient codelivery.
Reduction-sensitive disulfide group and acid-labile anticancer drug
(demethylcantharidin, DMC)-conjugated β-carboxylic amide group
were repeatedly and regularly introduced into copolymer chain simultaneously
via facile CuAAC click polymerization. The obtained multifunctional
polymeric prodrug P(DMC), mPEG-b-poly(disulfide-alt-demethylcantharidin)-b-mPEG was further
utilized for DOX encapsulation. Under tumor tissue/cell microenvironments
(pH 6.5 and 10 mM GSH), the DOX-loaded polymeric prodrug nanoparticles
(P(DMC)@DOX NPs) performed surface negative-to-positive charge conversion
and accelerated/sufficient release of DMC and DOX. The remarkably
enhanced cellular internalization and cytotoxicity in vitro, especially against DOX-resistant SMMC-7721 cells, were demonstrated.
P(DMC)@DOX NPs in vivo also exhibited higher tumor
accumulation and improved antitumor efficiency compared to P(SA)@DOX
NPs with one drug and without charge-conversion ability. The desired
multifunctional polymeric prodrug strategy brings a new opportunity
for cancer chemotherapy