Yang LüXinglong LiuTing ZhaoChuanbo DingQiteng DingNing WangShuang MaLina MaWencong Liu
Chemotherapy is a well-established method for treating cancer, but it has limited effectiveness due to its high dosage and harmful side effects. To address this issue, researchers have explored the use of photothermal agent nanoparticles as carriers for precise drug release in vivo. In this study, three different sizes of polydopamine nanoparticles (PDA–1, PDA–2, and PDA–3) were synthesized and evaluated. PDA–2 was selected for its optimal size, encapsulation rate, and drug loading rate. The release of the drug from PDA–2@TAX was tested at different pH and NIR laser irradiation levels. The results showed that PDA–2@TAX released more readily in an acidic environment and exhibited a high photothermal conversion efficiency when exposed to an 808 nm laser. In vitro experiments on ovarian cancer cells demonstrated that PDA–2@TAX effectively inhibited cell proliferation, highlighting its potential for synergistic chemotherapy-photothermal treatment.
Yukun ChenMingliang SuLijun JiaZhanxia Zhang
Alessio CarmignaniMatteo BattagliniAttilio MarinoFrancesca PignatelliGianni Ciofani
Xiao ChuLiufang ZhangYiling LiYue HeYu ZhangChang Du
Jingjing ZhouLina MaZhenshengnan LiBowen ChenYue WuXianying Meng
Junke LengXiaofeng DaiXiao ChengHao ZhouDong WangJing ZhaoKun MaChanghao CuiLi WangZhaoming Guo