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Waterborne Polyurethane Magnetic Nanomicelles With Magnetically Governed Functions for Breast Cancer Therapy Publisher Pubmed



Mahdieh A1, 2 ; Yeganeh H3 ; Motasadizadeh H1, 4 ; Nekoueifard E1, 5 ; Maghsoudian S1, 4 ; Hossein Ghahremani M6 ; Nystrom B7 ; Dinarvand R1, 4, 8
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Department of Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology, Faculty of Pharmacy, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, 14174, Iran
  2. 2. Department of Pharmacy, Section for Pharmaceutics and Social Pharmacy, University of Oslo, Oslo, N-0316, Norway
  3. 3. Iran Polymer and Petrochemical Institute, P.O. Box: 14965-115, Tehran, Iran
  4. 4. Nanotechnology Research Centre, Faculty of Pharmacy, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, 14174, Iran
  5. 5. Department of Cell Engineering, Cell Science Research Center, Royan Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Technology, ACECR, Tehran, Iran
  6. 6. Department of Toxicology and Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmacy, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  7. 7. Department of Chemistry, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1033, Blindern, Oslo, N-0315, Norway
  8. 8. Leicester School of Pharmacy, De Montfort University, Leicester, United Kingdom

Source: International Journal of Pharmaceutics Published:2023


Abstract

Drug delivery strategies aim to maximize a drug's therapeutic efficiency by increasing the drug's concentration at the target site while minimizing delivery to off-target tissues. There is a great deal of interest in using magnetic nanoparticles in combination with applied magnetic fields to selectively control drug accumulation and release in target tissue while minimizing effects on other tissues. In this study, a magnetic targeted drug delivery system based on waterborne polyurethane nanomicelles was prepared by encapsulating hydrophobic doxorubicin (DOX, model drug) and hydrophobic oleic acid-superparamagnetic nanoparticles (SPION-OA) into the hydrophobic core of waterborne polyurethane micelles (CPUM) using the solvent evaporation method. The prepared drug-loaded magnetomicelles (CPUM-DOX-SPION) had a spherical shape with an average diameter of 158 nm. The magnetomicelles showed superparamagnetic properties with excellent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast effects and T2 relaxation in vitro. In the absence and presence of a magnetic field, the cytocompatibility and cellular uptake of the samples were assessed by MTT assay and flow cytometry, respectively, and the cells were imaged with a confocal microscope. Application of the magnetic field increased cellular cytotoxicity and cellular uptake in association with improved DOX delivery. In addition, the in vivo study of tumor volume showed that tumor growth of the mice group treated with CPUM-DOX-SPION in the presence of an external magnetic field was significantly retarded, with no apparent loss of body weight, compared with the same magnetomicelles in the absence of the magnetic field and with free DOX at the same dose. Moreover, the in vivo MRI experiment indicated the potential of these magnetomicelles as a probe in MRI diagnosis for tumor targeting, and the results showed that magnetically guided delivery of CPUM-SPION magnetomicelles into tumors could significantly improve the targeting efficacy. All the results suggest that the prepared novel magnetomicelles will be promising theranostic systems for effective magnetically guided delivery of chemotherapeutic agents and image-guided personalized medicine. © 2023 Elsevier B.V.
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