Issue 1, 2022

Triggered and monitored drug release from bifunctional hybrid nanocomposites

Abstract

Polymer-coated carbon dot-containing calcium carbonate nanoparticles are reported as unique nanocomposites capable of encapsulating a chemotherapeutic drug and displaying afterglow behaviour. The poly(amino acid) polymeric component enhances nanoparticle dispersion and drug retention in aqueous solution, and can be designed to be cleavable to enable doxorubicin release under acidic conditions. The encapsulated carbon nanodots offer fluorescence and brief afterglow to the nanocomposites at neutral pH, which is lost when the nanocomposites encounter acidic (pH 5) solution. The loss of drug molecules, and fluorescence and phosphorescence provided by the carbon dots, in acidic solution ensures that the reported materials have potential promise as early-stage candidates as devices for monitored payload delivery to acidic environments.

Graphical abstract: Triggered and monitored drug release from bifunctional hybrid nanocomposites

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Sep 2021
Accepted
19 Nov 2021
First published
30 Nov 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Polym. Chem., 2022,13, 100-108

Triggered and monitored drug release from bifunctional hybrid nanocomposites

J. V. Rowley, P. A. Wall, H. Yu, M. J. Howard, D. L. Baker, A. Kulak, D. C. Green and P. D. Thornton, Polym. Chem., 2022, 13, 100 DOI: 10.1039/D1PY01227D

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