Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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A tumoral acidic pH-responsive drug delivery system based on a novel photosensitizer (fullerene) for in vitro and in vivo chemo-photodynamic therapy.

Fullerene has shown great potential both in drug delivery and photodynamic therapy. Herein, we developed a doxorubicin (DOX)-loaded poly(ethyleneimine) (PEI) derivatized fullerene (C60-PEI-DOX) to facilitate combined chemotherapy and photodynamic therapy in one system, and DOX was covalently conjugated onto C60-PEI by the pH-sensitive hydrazone linkage. The release profiles of DOX from C60-PEI-DOX showed a strong dependence on the environmental pH value. The biodistributions of C60-PEI-DOX were investigated by injecting CdSe/ZnS (Qds) labeled conjugates (C60-PEI-DOX/Qds) into tumor-bearing mice. C60-PEI-DOX/Qds showed a higher tumor targeting efficiency compared with Qds alone. Compared with free DOX in an in vivo murine tumor model, C60-PEI-DOX afforded higher antitumor efficacy without obvious toxic effects to normal organs owing to its good tumor targeting efficacy and the 2.4-fold greater amount of DOX released in the tumor than in the normal tissues. C60-PEI-DOX also showed high antitumor efficacy during photodynamic therapy. The ability of C60-PEI-DOX nanoparticles to combine local specific chemotherapy with external photodynamic therapy significantly improved the therapeutic efficacy of the cancer treatment, the combined treatment demonstrating a synergistic effect. These results suggest that C60-PEI-DOX may be promising for high treatment efficacy with minimal side effects in future therapy.

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