Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1429194 Materials Science and Engineering: C 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A novel controlled drug delivery system based on disulfide switcher•A core/shell structure with mesoporous silica nanoparticle core and crosslinked poly(acrylic acid) shell•The release rate of doxorubicin was three times higher in simulated environment of cancer cells.

A novel reduction-responsive drug delivery system was successfully constructed with mesoporous silica nanoparticle (MSN) core as a drug carrier and poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) shell crosslinked by disulfide linkages as a drug release switcher. To keep the pore structure of MSN intact, PAA was covalently attached to the exterior surface of MSN before removing structure-template via radical polymerization. After removing structure-template and loading doxorubicin (DOX), the PAA shell was crosslinked by cystamine dihydrochloride through amidation reaction. The loading content and the entrapment efficiency of DOX could reach up to 40.2% and 80.4%, respectively. Because that the dissociation of disulfide linkage is reduction-responsive, the release behavior of DOX could be controlled by varying the concentration of reductant, and the release rate was 49.4% after 24 h with the existence of 2 mM glutathione (simulated environment of cancer cells), about three times higher than that of without glutathione (corresponding to normal human cells), which was only 16.9%. The in vitro cell assays demonstrated that the disulfide linkages crosslinked MSN–PAA (MSN–PAA-crosslinked) was highly biocompatible and suitable to use as drug carrier, and the DOX loaded MSN–PAA-crosslinked showed remarkable cytotoxicity to HeLa cells (human cancer cells), and relatively lower cytotoxicity to 293 cells (human normal cells). These results imply that the MSN–PAA-crosslinked is a promising platform to construct reduction-responsive controlled drug delivery system for cancer therapy.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Biomaterials
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