Materials Today Bio (Dec 2024)

Nanoplatform for synergistic therapy constructed via the co-assembly of a reduction-responsive cholesterol-based block copolymer and a photothermal amphiphile

  • Yue Lu,
  • Tiantian Cai,
  • Juanjuan Gao,
  • Yangge Ren,
  • Yi Ding,
  • Shujing Liu,
  • Linyuan Liu,
  • Hao Huang,
  • Haijie Wang,
  • Chengji Wang,
  • Wei Wang,
  • Ruling Shen,
  • Bo Zhu,
  • Lin Jia

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29
p. 101355

Abstract

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The goal of combination cancer therapy, including chemo-phototherapy, is to achieve highly efficient antitumor effects while minimizing the adverse reactions associated with conventional chemotherapy. Nevertheless, enhancing the contribution of non-chemotherapeutic strategies in combination therapy is often challenging because this requires multiple active ingredients to be encapsulated in a single delivery system. However, most commonly used photothermal reagents are challenging to be loaded in large quantities and have poor biocompatibility. Herein, we developed photothermal co-micelles through a co-assembly strategy using a cholesterol-based liquid crystal block copolymer (LC-BCP) with disulfide bonds in the side chain of the LC blocks and a croconaine-based amphiphile (CBA) containing a cholesterol moiety. This approach allowed the CBA to be effectively embedded within LC-BCPs, serving as the functional component of the drug-loaded carrier. These co-micelles could encapsulate doxorubicin (DOX), showed tunable reduction-responsive drug release, and enabled near-infrared laser-triggered photothermal therapy as well as in vivo fluorescence and photothermal imaging. Following laser irradiation, the photothermal activity of the co-micelles rapidly induced tumor cell death and accelerated drug release. In vitro and in vivo experiments demonstrated that the synergistic photo-chemotherapeutic effects of these drug-loaded co-micelles offer a promising avenue for synergistic precision photothermal-chemotherapy.