RESUMEN
It is considered a significant challenge to construct nanocarriers that have high drug loading capacity and can overcome physiological barriers to deliver efficacious amounts of drugs to solid tumors. Here, the development of a safe, biconcave carbon nanodisk to address this challenge for treating breast cancer is reported. The nanodisk demonstrates fluorescent imaging capability, an exceedingly high loading capacity (947.8 mg g-1 , 94.78 wt%) for doxorubicin (DOX), and pH-responsive drug release. It exhibits a higher uptake rate by tumor cells and greater accumulation in tumors in a mouse model than its carbon nanosphere counterpart. In addition, the nanodisk absorbs and transforms near-infrared (NIR) light to heat, which enables simultaneous NIR-responsive drug release for chemotherapy and generation of thermal energy for tumor cell destruction. Notably, this NIR-activated dual therapy demonstrates a near complete suppression of tumor growth in a mouse model of triple-negative breast cancer when DOX-loaded nanodisks are administered systemically.
Asunto(s)
Carbono/química , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos/métodos , Hipertermia Inducida/métodos , Nanoestructuras/química , Fotoquimioterapia/métodos , Animales , Antibióticos Antineoplásicos/química , Antibióticos Antineoplásicos/farmacocinética , Antibióticos Antineoplásicos/farmacología , Línea Celular Tumoral , Supervivencia Celular/efectos de los fármacos , Terapia Combinada , Doxorrubicina/química , Doxorrubicina/farmacocinética , Doxorrubicina/farmacología , Femenino , Rayos Infrarrojos , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos BALB C , Nanoestructuras/efectos de la radiación , Nanoestructuras/ultraestructura , Distribución TisularRESUMEN
Nanostructured materials that have low tissue toxicity, multi-modal imaging capability and high photothermal conversion efficiency have great potential to enable image-guided near infrared (NIR) photothermal therapy (PTT). Here, we report a bifunctional nanoparticle (BFNP, â¼16â¯nm) comprised of a magnetic Fe3O4 core (â¼9.1â¯nm) covered by a fluorescent carbon shell (â¼3.4â¯nm) and prepared via a one-pot solvothermal synthesis method using ferrocene as the sole source. The BFNP exhibits excitation wavelength-tunable, upconverted and near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence property due to the presence of the carbon shell, and superparamagnetic behavior resulted from the Fe3O4 core. BFNPs demonstrate dual-modal imaging capacity both in vitro and in vivo with fluorescent imaging excited under a varying wavelength from 405â¯nm to 820â¯nm and with T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (r2â¯=â¯264.76â¯mM-1â¯s-1). More significantly, BFNPs absorb and convert NIR light to heat enabling photothermal therapy as demonstrated mice bearing C6 glioblastoma. These BFNPs show promise as an advanced nanoplatform to provide imaging guided photothermal therapy.