Near Infrared
Laser-Induced Targeted Cancer Therapy
Using Thermoresponsive Polymer Encapsulated Gold Nanorods
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Abstract
External stimuli, such as ultrasound,
magnetic field, and light,
can be applied to activate in vivo tumor targeting. Herein, we fabricated
polymer encapsulated gold nanorods to couple the photothermal properties
of gold nanorods and the thermo- and pH-responsive properties of polymers
in a single nanocomposite. The activation mechamism was thus transformed
from heat to near-infrared (NIR) laser, which can be more easily controlled.
Doxorubicin, a clinical anticancer drug, can be loaded into the nanocomposite
through electrostatic interactions with high loading content up to
24%. The nanocomposite’s accumulation in tumor post systematic
administration can be significantly enhanced by NIR laser irradiation,
providing a prerequisite for their therapeutic application which almost
completely inhibited tumor growth and lung metastasis. Since laser
can be manipulated very precisely and flexibly, the nanocomposite
provides an ideally versatile platform to simultaneously deliver heat
and anticancer drugs in a laser-activation mechanism with facile control
of the area, time, and dosage. The NIR laser-induced targeted cancer
thermo-chemotherapy without using targeting ligands represents a novel
targeted anticancer strategy with facile control and practical efficacy