4.7 Article

Interface-Engineered Paclitaxel-Based Hollow Mesoporous Organosilica Nanoplatforms for Photothermal-Enhanced Chemotherapy of Tumor

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 18, Issue 12, Pages 4531-4542

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.1c00735

Keywords

hollow mesoporous organosilica nanoparticles; glutathione-responsive biodegradation; co-delivery; controlled release; biocompatibility; photothermal-enhanced chemotherapy

Funding

  1. Key Natural Science Foundation of Gansu province [20JR10RA585]

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A biodegradable hollow mesoporous organosilica nanoparticle (HMON)-based nanoplatform for photothermal-enhanced chemotherapy of tumor was successfully fabricated, demonstrating high drug-loading capacity and photothermal properties. The constructed nanosystem showed great potential in combinational antitumor therapy with significant tumor growth suppression under NIR laser irradiation.
Having benefited from the combination of different therapeutic modalities, functionalized nanoplatforms with synergistic strategies have aroused great interest in anticancer treatment. Herein, an engineered, a biodegradable hollow mesoporous organosilica nanoparticle (HMON)-based nanoplatform was fabricated for photothermal-enhanced chemotherapy of tumor. For the first time, we demonstrated that HMONs could serve as nanocarriers for co-delivering of both the paclitaxel and photothermal agent new indocyanine green (IR820), denoted as Paclitaxel/IR820@ HMONs-PEG. The as-prepared nanosystem exhibited a high paclitaxel-loading capacity of 28.4%, much higher than most paclitaxel-loaded nanoformulations. Furthermore, incorporating thioether bonds (S-S) into the HMONs' framework endowed them with GSH-responsive biodegradation behavior, leading to the controllable release of drugs under a tumor reducing microenvironment, and hindered the premature release of paclitaxel. Upon being irradiated with an NIR laser, the obtained co-delivery nanosystem exhibited great photothermal properties generated from IR820. The fabricated nanocomposites could significantly suppress tumor growth under NIR laser irradiation, as validated by in vitro and in vivo assessments. Combined with outstanding biocompatibility, the constructed nanosystem holds great potential in combinational antitumor therapy.

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