Issue 30, 2024, Issue in Progress

A novel nanodrug for the sensitization of photothermal chemotherapy for breast cancer in vitro

Abstract

Owing to the complexity of tumor treatment, clinical tumor treatment has evolved from a single treatment mode to multiple combined treatment modes. Reducing the tolerance of tumors to heat and the toxicity of chemotherapy drugs to the body, as well as increasing the sensitivity of tumors to photothermal therapy and chemotherapy drugs, are key issues that urgently need to be addressed in the current cancer treatment. In this work, polylactic acid-based drug nanoparticles (PLA@DOX/GA/ICG) were synthesized with good photothermal conversion ability by encapsulating the water-soluble anticancer drug doxorubicin (DOX), photothermal conversion agent indocyanine green (ICG) and liposoluble drug gambogic acid (GA) using a double emulsion method. The preparation process of PLA@DOX/GA/ICG was examined. Gambogic acid entrapped in PLA@DOX/GA/ICG nanoparticles could act as an HSP90 protein inhibitor to achieve bidirectional sensitization to chemotherapy and photothermal therapy under 808 nm laser irradiation for the first time, effectively ablating breast cancer cells in vitro. This nanodrug was expected to be used for the efficient treatment of tumors.

Graphical abstract: A novel nanodrug for the sensitization of photothermal chemotherapy for breast cancer in vitro

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Mar 2024
Accepted
04 Jun 2024
First published
05 Jul 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2024,14, 21292-21299

A novel nanodrug for the sensitization of photothermal chemotherapy for breast cancer in vitro

J. C. Kong, F. Zhou, L. Shi, Y. Wei and C. Wu, RSC Adv., 2024, 14, 21292 DOI: 10.1039/D4RA01611D

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