Issue 35, 2018

Improving the carrier stability and drug loading of unimolecular micelle-based nanotherapeutics for acid-activated drug delivery and enhanced antitumor therapy

Abstract

Nanomedicines based on unimolecular micelles (UMs) have shown unique advantages such as high micellar stability, programmed cargo delivery and enhanced therapeutic efficiency. Herein, we report an acid-activated amphiphilic prodrug based on a dextran (DEX) polymeric framework (DEX–PDOX-b-POEGMA, labelled DMO@DOX), which conjugates a diblock copolymer of a hydrophobic doxorubicin (DOX) prodrug block and a hydrophilic poly[oligo(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate] (POEGMA) block by atom transfer radical polymerization. The DMO@DOX prodrug can form nano-sized UMs in aqueous media attributed to its amphiphilic structure and achieve a very high drug loading rate of 80.4 wt%. In the presence of an acidic medium resembling a tumor microenvironment, the hydrazone bond embedded in the prodrug is broken, which releases the loaded drug of DOX. The DMO@DOX prodrug shows a notable and preferential inhibition effect on the growth of tumor cells in vitro compared to healthy cells, leading to advantageous biocompatibility and effective antitumor activity. For verification, the DMO@DOX prodrug was applied in the treatment of a mouse model bearing xenograft tumors and showed a remarkable therapeutic performance. This study demonstrates an effective design of UM-based nanoagents to improve the micellar stability of polymeric prodrug micelles with enhanced performance in cancer therapy.

Graphical abstract: Improving the carrier stability and drug loading of unimolecular micelle-based nanotherapeutics for acid-activated drug delivery and enhanced antitumor therapy

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 May 2018
Accepted
06 Aug 2018
First published
08 Aug 2018

J. Mater. Chem. B, 2018,6, 5549-5561

Improving the carrier stability and drug loading of unimolecular micelle-based nanotherapeutics for acid-activated drug delivery and enhanced antitumor therapy

X. Shi, S. Bai, C. Yang, X. Ma, M. Hou, J. Chen, P. Xue, C. M. Li, Y. Kang and Z. Xu, J. Mater. Chem. B, 2018, 6, 5549 DOI: 10.1039/C8TB01384E

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