Fahime Salari-Goharizi, Mohamad Mahani, Hamid Sepehrian, Mehdi Yoosefian, Faeze Khakbaz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Santa Barbara Amorphous-15 (SBA-15) silica mesoporous nanoparticles (SBANPs) and carbon quantum dots (CQDs) were synthesized and characterized using nitrogen adsorption isotherms, dynamic light scattering, thermal gravimetric analysis, infrared spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction. The doxorubicin loading capacity of 75.5 mg/g and the loading efficiency of 75% was calculated for the synthesized SBANPs. Theoretical loading mechanism was studied using density functional theory on DOX - SBA-15 and shows that DOX/SBANP loading possess binding energy within the range of chemisorption with the binding energy of -167.12 kJ/mol. The SBANPs were modified with CQDs and folic acid as labelling and targeting agents and capped with PVP for temperature-controlled release. The effect of pH (5.2 and 7.2), temperature (37 and 48 °C), and glutathione concentration were studied as factors affecting the release performance of the carrier. In the pH of the tumor microenvironment and in the presence of glutathione, 50% of the drug was released within 24 h. However, when the temperature was raised to 48 °C, the release increased to 80%. Because of the proven photothermal property of CQDs, this simple and low cost multifunctional nanocarrier can be used for targeted delivery and controlled release in cancer cells.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Porous Materials is an interdisciplinary and international periodical devoted to all types of porous materials. Its aim is the rapid publication
of high quality, peer-reviewed papers focused on the synthesis, processing, characterization and property evaluation of all porous materials. The objective is to
establish a unique journal that will serve as a principal means of communication for the growing interdisciplinary field of porous materials.
Porous materials include microporous materials with 50 nm pores.
Examples of microporous materials are natural and synthetic molecular sieves, cationic and anionic clays, pillared clays, tobermorites, pillared Zr and Ti
phosphates, spherosilicates, carbons, porous polymers, xerogels, etc. Mesoporous materials include synthetic molecular sieves, xerogels, aerogels, glasses, glass
ceramics, porous polymers, etc.; while macroporous materials include ceramics, glass ceramics, porous polymers, aerogels, cement, etc. The porous materials
can be crystalline, semicrystalline or noncrystalline, or combinations thereof. They can also be either organic, inorganic, or their composites. The overall
objective of the journal is the establishment of one main forum covering the basic and applied aspects of all porous materials.