Abstract

Recently, chemotherapy is still widely exploited to treat the residual, infiltrative tumor cells after surgical resection. However, many anticancer drugs are limited in clinical application due to their poor water-solubility (hydrophibic) and stability, low bioavailability, and unfavorable pharmacokinetics. Herein, an amphiphilic stearic acid-O-carboxymethyl chitosan (SA-CMC) conjugate was synthesized by amide linkage of SA to the backbone of CMC polymer and then self-assembled into nanoparticles (SA-CMC NPs) with the hydrodynamic particle size of ~100 nm. Subsequently, Paclitaxel (PTX) as a potent and broad-spectrum anticancer drug was loaded into SA-CMC NPs by a probe sonication combined with dialysis method. Owing to the multi-hydrophobic inner cores, the prepared PTX-SA-CMC NPs showed a considerable drug-loading capacity of ~19 wt% and a biphasic release behavior with an accumulative release amount in the range of 70-90% within 72 h. PTX-SA-CMC NPs remarkably enhanced the accumulation at the tumor sites by passive targeting followed by cellular endocytosis. Upon the stimuli of acid, PTX-SA-CMC NPs showed exceptional instability by pH change, thereby triggering the rapid disassembly and accelerated drug release. Consequently, compared with Cremophor EL-based free PTX treatment, PTX-SA-CMC NPs under pH-stimuli accomplished highly efficient apoptosis in cancer cells and effectively suppression of tumors by chemotherapy. Overall, PTX-SA-CMC NPs integrating imaging capacity might be a simple yet feasible PTX nanosystem for tumor-targeted delivery and cancer therapy.

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