pH-triggered sustained release of arsenic trioxide by polyacrylic acid capped mesoporous silica nanoparticles for solid tumor treatment in vitro and in vivo

In this study, a polyacrylic acid capped pH-triggered mesoporous silica nanoparticles was conducted to improve the pharmacokinetics and enhance the antitumor effect of arsenic trioxide. The mesoporous silica nanoparticles loaded with arsenic trioxide was grafted with polyacrylic acid (PAA-ATO-MSN) as a pH-responsive biomaterial on the surface to achieve the release of drug in acidic microenvironment of tumor, instead of burst release action in circulation. The nanoparticles were characterized with uniform grain size (particle sizes of 158.6 ± 1.3 nm and pore sizes of 3.71 nm, respectively), historically comparable drug loading efficiency (11.42 ± 1.75%), pH-responsive and strengthened sustained release features. The cell toxicity of amino groups modified mesoporous silica nanoparticles (NH2-MSN) was significantly reduced by capping of polyacrylic acid. In pharmacokinetic studies, the half time (t1/2β) was prolonged by 1.3 times, and the area under curve) was increased by 2.6 times in PAA-ATO-MSN group compared with free arsenic trioxide group. Subsequently, the antitumor efficacy in vitro (SMMC-7721 cell line) and in vivo (H22 xenografts) was remarkably enhanced indicated that PAA-ATO-MSN improved the antitumor effect of the drug. These results suggest that the polyacrylic acid capped mesoporous silica nanoparticles (PAA-MSN) will be a promising nanocarrier for improving pharmacokinetic features and enhancing the anti-tumor efficacy of arsenic tri...
Source: Journal of Biomaterials Applications - Category: Materials Science Authors: Tags: Nanotechnology in Biomaterials Source Type: research