Active targeting drug-gold nanorod hybrid nanoparticles for amplifying photoacoustic signal and enhancing anticancer efficacy†
Abstract
The development of theranostic nanomaterials with limited side effects and increased therapeutic efficacy is a promising approach for cancer imaging and therapy. In the present study, the development of a multifunctional metal–organic hybrid nanoparticle (NP) with enhanced photoacoustic (PA) imaging performance able to be actively uptaken by cancer cells for synergistic chemo-photothermal cancer therapy was reported. The theranostic NP was composed through the coordination effect between an ultrasmall gold nanorod (AuNR), a thick coating layer of the organic near-infrared dye IR780, and the anticancer drug doxorubicin (DOX), named AuNR@IR780/DOX-RGD-PEG. In addition, the theranostic NP surface was conjugated with targeting ligand RGD and a protective PEG shell, where the PEG played a role in concealing or exposing the RGD for specific targeting of the NPs to the cancer cells. The theranostic NP demonstrated a greatly enhanced PA imaging signal compared to AuNR or IR780, due to the fact that the electromagnetic field of the AuNR increased the light absorption efficiency of the IR780 coating based on the theoretical simulation results. Furthermore, the “Trojan-horse” active targeting strategy not only increased the uptake of NPs by tumor cells, but also decreased the non-specific uptake by healthy cells, thus limiting the side effects. This study developed a smart theranostic NP for enhanced cancer PA imaging and specific cancer therapy.