Abstract

In this work, a tumor-targeted and multi-stimuli responsive drug delivery system combining infrared thermal imaging of cells with thermo-chemotherapy was developed. Oxidized mesoporous carbon nanoparticles (MCNs-COOH) with high photothermal conversion ability (photothermal transduction efficiency η = 27.4%) in near-infrared (NIR) region were utilized to encapsulate doxorubicin (DOX). The outer surfaces of MCNs-COOH were capped with multifunctional carbon dots (CDHA) as simultaneous smart gatekeepers, a tumor targeting moiety and a fluorescent probe. NIR laser irradiation killed cancer cells through NIR-light induced hyperthermia, facilitated chemotherapeutic drug release and enhanced the sensitivity of tumor cells to drugs. The therapeutic efficacy in two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) cells demonstrated that MC-CDHA loading DOX (MC-CDHA/DOX) had good chemo-photothermal synergistic antitumor effects (combination index of CI = 0.448). The biodistribution and pharmacodynamics experiments of MC-CDHA/DOX in the 4T1 tumor model indicated that MCNs-COOH prolonged the residence time of DOX in tumor tissues and therefore actualized effective synergistic photothermal chemotherapy. By combining these excellent capabilities, the tumor-targeted and multi-stimuli responsive drug delivery system can be utilized as a visible nanoplatform for chemophotothermal synergistic therapy.

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