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CO2-based amphiphilic polycarbonate micelles enable a reliable and efficient platform for tumor imaging.


ABSTRACT: Biodegradable polymeric nanomaterials can be directly broken down by intracellular processes, offering a desirable way to solve toxicity issues for cancer diagnosis and treatment. Among them, aliphatic polycarbonates are approved for application in biological fields by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), however, high hydrophobicity, deficient functionality and improper degradation offer significant room for improvement in these materials.

Methods

To achieve progress in this direction, herein, we demonstrate that CO2-based amphiphilic polycarbonates (APC) with improved hydrophilicity and processability can be used as a reliable and efficient platform for tumor imaging. To better investigate their potential, we devised a convenient strategy through conjugation of APC with gadolinium (Gd).

Results

The resulting polymeric micelles (APC-DTPA/Gd) exhibit excellent magnetic resonance imaging performance, simultaneously enabling real-time visualization of bioaccumulation and decomposition of polymeric micelles in vivo. Importantly, these micelles can be degraded to renally cleared products within a reasonable timescale without evidence of toxicity.

Conclusion

Our findings may help the development of CO2-based amphiphilic polycarbonate for cancer diagnosis and treatment, accompanied by their low-toxicity degradation pathway.

SUBMITTER: Li Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5706092 | biostudies-literature | 2017

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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CO<sub>2</sub>-based amphiphilic polycarbonate micelles enable a reliable and efficient platform for tumor imaging.

Li Yuanyuan Y   Liu Shunjie S   Zhao Xun X   Wang Ying Y   Liu Jianhua J   Wang Xianhong X   Lu Lehui L  

Theranostics 20171017 19


Biodegradable polymeric nanomaterials can be directly broken down by intracellular processes, offering a desirable way to solve toxicity issues for cancer diagnosis and treatment. Among them, aliphatic polycarbonates are approved for application in biological fields by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), however, high hydrophobicity, deficient functionality and improper degradation offer significant room for improvement in these materials.<h4>Methods</h4>To achieve progress in  ...[more]

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