Synthesis, characterization, and in vitro evaluation of novel polymer-coated magnetic nanoparticles for controlled delivery of doxorubicin
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Abstract
Poly (N-isopropylacrylamide-methyl methacrylic acid, PNIPAAm-MAA)-grafted magnetic nanoparticles were synthesized using silane-coated magnetic nanoparticles as a template for radical polymerization of N-isopropylacrylamide and methacrylic acid. Properties of these nanoparticles, such as size, drug-loading efficiency, and drug release kinetics, were evaluated in vitro for targeted and controlled drug delivery. The resulting nanoparticles had a diameter of 100 nm and a doxorubicin-loading efficiency of 75%, significantly higher doxorubicin release at 40ط¢آ°C compared with 37ط¢آ°C, and pH 5.8 compared with pH 7.4, demonstrating their temperature and pH sensitivity, respectively. In addition, the particles were characterized by X-ray powder diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and vibrating sample magnetometry. In vitro cytotoxicity testing showed that the PNIPAAm- MAA-coated magnetic nanoparticles had no cytotoxicity and were biocompatible, indicating their potential for biomedical application. ط¢آ© 2012 Akbarzadeh et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.
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biomaterial, doxorubicin, magnetic nanoparticle, nanocoating, poly (n isopropylacrylamide methyl methacrylic acid), silane, unclassified drug, article, cancer cell culture, controlled drug release, controlled study, cytotoxicity test, drug delivery system, drug determination, drug research, drug structure, drug synthesis, drug targeting, human, human cell, in vitro study, infrared spectroscopy, magnetometry, particle size, pH measurement, polymerization, scanning electron microscopy, structure analysis, temperature sensitivity, vibrating sample magnetometry, X ray powder diffraction