6533b7d7fe1ef96bd126840b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Near-Infrared Light Responsive Folate Targeted Gold Nanorods for Combined Photothermal-Chemotherapy of Osteosarcoma.

Anna Li VolsiGennara CavallaroGaetano GiammonaValeria VetriCinzia ScialabbaMariano Licciardi

subject

HyperthermiaNIR-laser triggered drug releaseMaterials sciencefolate-targetedNanotechnology02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesphotothermal-chemotherapyFolic Acidgold nanorodCell Line TumorAmphiphileZeta potentialmedicineHumansGeneral Materials ScienceOsteosarcomaAqueous solutionNanotubesPhotothermal therapy021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologymedicine.disease0104 chemical sciencesCancer cellBiophysicsOsteosarcomaNanorodMaterials Science (all)Gold0210 nano-technology

description

Folate-targeted gold nanorods (GNRs) are proposed as selective theranostic agents for osteosarcoma treatment. An amphiphilic polysaccharide based graft-copolymer (INU-LA-PEG-FA) and an amino derivative of the α,β-poly(N-2-hydroxyethyl)-d,l-aspartamide functionalized with folic acid (PHEA-EDA-FA), have been synthesized to act as coating agents for GNRs. The obtained polymer-coated GNRs were characterized in terms of size, shape, zeta potential, chemical composition, and aqueous stability. They protected the anticancer drug nutlin-3 and were able to deliver it efficiently in different physiological media. The ability of the proposed systems to selectively kill tumor cells was tested on U2OS cancer cells expressing high levels of FRs and compared with human bronchial epithelial cells (16HBE) and human dermal fibroblasts (HDFa). The property of the nanosystems of efficiently controlling drug release upon NIR laser irradiation and of acting as an excellent hyperthermia agent as well as Two Photon Luminescence imaging contrast agents was demonstrated. The proposed folate-targeted GNRs have also been tested in terms of chemoterapeutic and thermoablation efficacy on tridimensional (3-D) osteosarcoma models.

10.1021/acsami.7b03711https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28383273