Chitosan-based injectable in situ forming hydrogels containing dopamine-reduced graphene oxide and resveratrol for breast cancer chemo-photothermal therapy
Strategies combining nanomaterials’ chemotherapy and photothermal therapy hold an enormous potential for improving cancer treatment. Still, the translation of this modality has been hindered by the immunogenicity triggered by some of the polymers used for coating nanomaterials as well as by the nano...
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Published in | Biochemical engineering journal Vol. 185; p. 108529 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Elsevier B.V
01.07.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Strategies combining nanomaterials’ chemotherapy and photothermal therapy hold an enormous potential for improving cancer treatment. Still, the translation of this modality has been hindered by the immunogenicity triggered by some of the polymers used for coating nanomaterials as well as by the nanostructures’ poor tumor uptake after systemic administration. To address this bottleneck, the formulation of injectable polymeric matrices capable of delivering/confining chemotherapeutics and nanomaterials into the tumor site has been gathering a great interest. In this work, ionotropically crosslinked chitosan-based injectable in situ forming hydrogels co-incorporating Dopamine-reduced graphene oxide (DOPA-rGO; photothermal nano-agent) and Resveratrol (RES; chemotherapeutic drug), were prepared for the first time, to be applied in cancer chemo-photothermal therapy. The formulated hydrogels displayed injectability and in situ gelation as well as suitable physicochemical properties and good cytocompatibility. In vitro, the hydrogels’ photothermal therapy (DOPA-rGO@Gel +NIR light) only diminished the breast cancer cells’ viability to 72%. Moreover, cancer cells exposed to the hydrogels’ chemotherapy (RES+DOPA-rGO@Gel) still displayed a viability of 75%. In stark contrast, the hydrogels’ chemo-photothermal therapy (RES+DOPA-rGO@Gel +NIR light) was capable of decreasing cancer cells’ viability to just 31%. Overall, RES+DOPA-rGO@Gel presents an enormous potential for the chemo-photothermal therapy of breast cancer cells.
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•An injectable in situ forming hydrogel containing DOPA-rGO and resveratrol were prepared.•The NIR-responsive hydrogels could produce a temperature increase of about 11 °C.•The chemo-PTT effect mediated by RES+DOPA-rGO@Gel decrease cancer cells’ viability to 31%. |
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ISSN: | 1369-703X 1873-295X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bej.2022.108529 |