May 7, 2024
Ali Navid

Ali Navid

Academic rank: Assistant professor
Address: Department of Laser and optical Engineering, University of Bonab, Bonab, Iran
Education: Ph.D in Physics-optics
Phone: 04137745000-1623
Faculty: Faculty of Science
Department: Photonics

Research

Title
Remote Trice Light, Temperature, and pH-actuation of Switchable Magneto-Plasmonic Nanocarriers for Combinational Photothermal and Controlled/Targeted Chemotherapies
Type Article
Keywords
switchable drug release, chemophotothermal therapy, magneto-plasmonic nanoparticles, laser-enhanced release,responsive polymers
Researchers Naby Hadilou، Ali Navid، Mitra Amoli-Diva، Rasoul Sadighi-Bonabi

Abstract

Three magneto-plasmonic nanohybrids were synthesized using Au- and Ag-coated Fe3O4 nanoparticles (NPs)-modified dual pH- and temperature-responsive triblock copolymer of poly (butyl methacrylate-co- acrylamide-co-methacrylic acid) to serve as drug carriers with potential of using in both photothermal and controlled/targeted chemotherapies. The internal superparamagnetic core gives the carriers targeted-delivery characteristics, and surface plasmon resonanceebased noble metallic Au/Ag shells give them on-demand photothermal and photo-triggering release properties. To investigate the effect of coating method on the targeting property of synthesized carriers, Au NPs were attached to the magnetic core by 2 different direct/indirect procedures and the properties of the synthesized carriers including swelling ratio and thermal and optical sensitivity and switching were comprehensively investigated in 2 different buffer solutions with pH 5.5 and 7.4 at 37C. Letrozolewas used as a model anticancer drug and its loading and release properties were evaluated for the four nanocarriers. The cytotoxicity of drug-free and letrozole-loaded nanocarriers on normal L929 fibroblast and MDAMB 231 breast cancer cell lines was evaluated in absence/presence of laser radiation. The results revealed that the carriers have the potential of serving as switchable trimodal light/temperature/pH-triggered and targeted/controlled drug delivery platforms for chemophotothermal therapy.