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The PtIV prodrug iproplatin has been actively loaded into liposomes using a calcium acetate gradient, achieving a 3-fold enhancement in drug concentration compared to passive loading strategies. A strain-promoted cycloaddition reaction (azide- dibenzocyclooctyne) was used to attach iproplatin-loaded liposomes L(Pt) to gas-filled microbubbles (M), forming an ultrasound-responsive drug delivery vehicle [M-L(Pt)]. Ultrasound-triggered release of iproplatin from the microbubble-liposome construct was evaluated in cellulo. Breast cancer (MCF-7) cells treated with both free iproplatin and iproplatin-loaded liposome-microbubbles [M-L(Pt)] demonstrated an increase in platinum concentration when exposed to ultrasound. No appreciable platinum uptake was observed in MCF-7 cells following treatment with L(Pt) only or L(Pt)+ultrasound, suggesting that microbubble-mediated ultrasonic release of platinum-based drugs from liposomal carriers enables greater control over drug delivery.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1002/open.202100222

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2021-12-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

10

Pages

1170 - 1176

Total pages

6

Keywords

cancer, drug delivery, iproplatin, liposome, ultrasound, Drug Delivery Systems, Humans, Liposomes, Microbubbles, Organoplatinum Compounds