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  3. 03 GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/20401
Title: Albumin-Gold Nanorod Nanoplatform for Cell-Mediated Tumoritropic Delivery with Homogenous ChemoDrug Distribution and Enhanced Retention Ability
Authors: Chiu, Hsien-Ting
Su, Cheng-Kuan
Sun, Yuh-Chang
Chiang, Chi-Shiun
Huang, Yu-Fen
Keywords: MESENCHYMAL STEM-CELLS;PHOTOTHERMAL THERAPY;MAGNETIC HYPERTHERMIA;TARGETED-DELIVERY;CANCER-TREATMENT;PROTEIN CORONA;BREAST-CANCER;IN-VITRO;NANOPARTICLES;DRUG
Issue Date: Oct-2017
Publisher: IVYSPRING INT PUBL
Journal Volume: 7
Journal Issue: 12
Start page/Pages: 3034-3052
Source: THERANOSTICS
Abstract: 
Recently, living cells with tumor-homing properties have provided an exciting opportunity to achieve optimal delivery of nanotherapeutic agents. However, premature payload leakage may impair the host cells, often leading to inadequate in vivo investigations or therapeutic efficacy. Therefore, a nanoplatform that provides a high drug-loading capacity and the precise control of drug release is required. In the present study, a robust one-step synthesis of a doxorubicin (DOX)-loaded gold nanorod/albumin core-shell nanoplatform (NR@DOX: SA) was designed for effective macrophage-mediated delivery to demonstrate how nanoparticle-loaded macrophages improve photothermal/chemodrug distribution and retention ability to achieve enhanced antitumor effects. The serum albumin shell of these nanoagents served as a drug reservoir to delay the intracellular DOX release and drug-related toxicity that impairs the host cell carriers. Near-infrared laser irradiation enabled on-demand payload release to destroy neighboring tumor cells. A series of in vivo quantitative analyses demonstrated that the nanoengineered macrophages delivered the nanodrugs through tumor-tropic migration to tumor tissues, resulting in the twice homogenous and efficient photothermal activations of drug release to treat prostate cancer. By contrast, localized pristine NR@DOX: SAs exhibit limited photothermal drug delivery that further reduces their retention ability and therapeutic efficacy after second combinational treatment, leading to a failure of cancer therapy. Moreover, the resultant unhealable wounds impair quality of life. Free DOX has rapid clearance and therefore exhibits limited antitumor effects. Our findings suggest that in comparison with pristine nanoparticles or free DOX, the nanoengineered macrophages effectively demonstrate the importance and effect of homogeneous drug distribution and retention ability in cancer therapy.
URI: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/20401
ISSN: 1838-7640
DOI: 10.7150/thno.19279
Appears in Collections:03 GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING

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