Bioinspired Polymerization of Quercetin to Produce a Curcumin-Loaded Nanomedicine with Potent Cytotoxicity and Cancer-Targeting Potential in Vivo

Suhair Sunoqrot, Tahany Al-debsi, Eveen Al-shalabi, Lina Hasan Ibrahim, Farid Nazer Faruqu, Adam Walters, Robert Palgrave, Khuloud T. Al-jamal

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Citations (Scopus)
255 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Nanomedicine has had a profound impact on the treatment of many diseases, especially cancer. However, synthesis of multifunctional nanoscale drug carriers often requires multistep coupling and purification reactions, which can pose major scale-up challenges. Here, we leveraged bioinspired oxidation-triggered polymerization of catechols to synthesize nanoparticles (NPs) from the plant polyphenol quercetin (QCT) loaded with a hydrophobic anticancer drug, curcumin, and functionalized with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) for steric stabilization in one reaction step. NPs were formed by base-catalyzed oxidative self-polymerization of QCT in the presence of curcumin and thiol-terminated PEG upon mixing in a universal solvent (dimethyl sulfoxide), followed by self-assembly with the gradual addition of water. Dynamic light scattering and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy were used to confirm NP PEGylation. Drug loading was verified by UV–vis spectroscopy. Curcumin-loaded NPs were efficiently internalized by CT26 murine colon cancer cells as determined by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. NPs also demonstrated sustained release and potent cytotoxicity in vitro. Moreover, in vivo imaging of CT26 tumor-bearing Balb/c mice following tail vein injection of DiR-labeled QCT NPs showed steady tumor accumulation of the NPs up to 24 h. This was further supported by significant tumor uptake of curcumin-loaded QCT NPs as measured by flow cytometry analysis of tumor homogenates. Our findings present a greener synthetic route for the fabrication of drug-loaded surface-functionalized NPs from poorly water-soluble plant polyphenols such as QCT as promising anticancer delivery systems.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6036-6045
Number of pages10
JournalACS Biomaterials Science and Engineering
Volume5
Issue number11
Early online date18 Oct 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11 Nov 2019

Keywords

  • bioinspired nanoparticles
  • cancer targeting
  • curcumin
  • green chemistry
  • quercetin

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