Degradable poly(beta-amino ester) nanoparticles for cancer cytoplasmic drug delivery.

Nanomedicine

Center for Bionanoengineering and Nanomedicine and Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, College of Materials Science and Chemical Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China.

Published: June 2009

Fast cytoplasmic drug delivery can overcome cancer cells' drug resistance and thus have an enhanced therapeutic efficacy. Such a drug delivery regime requires drug carriers capable of entering cancer cells, localizing and rapidly releasing the drug into endosomes/lysosomes, and subsequently disrupting their membranes to release the drug into the cytosol. We herein report a low-toxic and degradable poly(beta-amino ester)-graft-polyethylene glycol (BAE-PEG) co-polymer forming pH-responsive nanoparticles capable of cytoplasmic drug delivery. BAE-PEG was synthesized by condensation polymerization of diacrylate and piperazine in the presence of a PEG-diacrylate macromonomer. BAE-PEG with 2% or 5% PEG side chains formed micelles (nanoparticles) with diameters of about 100 nm. The BAE-PEG nanoparticles were shown to rapidly enter cancer cells, localize in their endosomes/lysosomes, and subsequently disrupt them to release the drugs into the cytosol. Camptothecin loaded in the nanoparticles had a higher cytotoxicity to SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cells than free camptothecin.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nano.2008.09.003DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

drug delivery
16
cytoplasmic drug
12
cancer cells
12
degradable polybeta-amino
8
drug
8
endosomes/lysosomes subsequently
8
nanoparticles
5
cancer
5
polybeta-amino ester
4
ester nanoparticles
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!