The pH-responsive micelles have enormous potential as nanosized drug carriers for cancer therapy due to their physicochemical changes in response to the tumor intracellular acidic microenvironment. Herein, a series of comb-like amphiphilic copolymers bearing acetal-functionalized backbone were developed based on poly[(2,4,6-trimethoxybenzylidene-1,1,1-tris(hydroxymethyl) ethane methacrylate-co-poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate] [P(TTMA-co-mPEGMA)] as effective nanocarriers for intracellular curcumin (CUR) release. P(TTMA-co-mPEGMA) copolymers with different hydrophobic-hydrophilic ratios were prepared by one-step reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) copolymerization of TTMA and mPEGMA. Their molecular structures and chemical compositions were confirmed by (1)H NMR, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and gel permeation chromatography (GPC). P(TTMA-co-mPEGMA) copolymers could self-assemble into nanosized micelles in aqueous solution and displayed low critical micelle concentration (CMC). All P(TTMA-co-mPEGMA) micelles displayed excellent drug loading capacity, due to the strong π-π conjugate action and hydrophobic interaction between the PTTMA and CUR. Moreover, the hydrophobic PTTMA chain could be selectively hydrolyzed into a hydrophilic backbone in the mildly acidic environment, leading to significant swelling and final disassembly of the micelles. These morphological changes of P(TTMA-co-mPEGMA) micelles with time at pH 5.0 were determined by DLS and TEM. The in vitro CUR release from the micelles exhibited a pH-dependent behavior. The release rate of CUR was significantly accelerated at mildly acidic pH of 4.0 and 5.0 compared to that at pH 7.4. Toxicity test revealed that the P(TTMA-co-mPEGMA) copolymers exhibited low cytotoxicity, whereas the CUR-loaded micelles maintained high cytotoxicity for HepG-2 and EC-109 cells. The results indicated that the novel P(TTMA-co-mPEGMA) micelles with low CMC, small and tunable sizes, high drug loading, pH-responsive drug release behavior, and good biocompatibility may have potential as hydrophobic drug delivery nanocarriers for cancer therapy with intelligent delivery.
Nanoparticle (NP)-assisted drug delivery systems with disassemblable behaviors in response to intracellular microenvironment are urgently demanded in systemic cancer chemotherapy for enhanced intracellular drug release. Curcumin (CUR), an effective and safe anticancer agent, was limited by its water insolubility and poor bioavailability. Herein, pH and reduction dual-induced disassemblable NPs for high loading efficiency and improved intracellular release of CUR were developed based on an acid degradable cyclic benzylidene acetal groups (CBAs)-functionalized poly(2,4,6-trimethoxybenzylidene-1,1,1-tris(hydroxymethyl)ethane methacrylate)-g-SS-poly(ethylene glycol) (PTTMA-g-SS-PEG) graft copolymer, which was readily prepared via RAFT copolymerization and coupling reaction. The NPs self-assembled from PTTMA-g-SS-PEG copolymers were stable at physiological pH, and quickly disassembled in mildly acidic and reductive environments because of the hydrolysis of CBAs in hydrophobic PTTMA core and the cleavage of disulfide-linked detachable PEG shell. PTTMA-g-SS-PEG NPs exhibited excellent CUR loading capacity with drug loading content up to 19.2% and entrapment efficiency of 96.0%. Within 20 h in vitro, less than 15.0% of CUR was released from the CUR-loaded NPs in normal physiological conditions, whereas 94.3% was released in the presence of reductive agent and mildly acidic conditions analogous to the microenvironment in endosome/lysosome and cytoplasm. Confocal fluorescence microscopies revealed that the CUR-loaded PTTMA-g-SS-PEG NPs exhibited more efficiently intracellular CUR release for EC-109 cells than that of CUR-loaded reduction-unresponsive PTTMA-g-PEG NPs and free CUR. In vitro cytotoxicity studies displayed blank PTTMA-g-SS-PEG NPs showed low toxicity at concentrations up to 1.0 mg/mL, whereas CUR-loaded PTTMA-g-SS-PEG NPs demonstrated more efficient growth inhibition toward EC-109 and HepG-2 cells than reduction-unresponsive controls and free CUR. Therefore, the above results indicated that pH and reduction dual-induced disassemblable PTTMA-g-SS-PEG NPs may have emerged as superior nanocarriers for active loading and promoted intracellular drug delivery in systemic cancer chemotherapy.
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