CuFeS2 Nanoparticles Functionalized with a Thermoresponsive Polymer for Photothermia and Externally Controlled Drug Delivery

John S Conteh,Giulia E P Nucci,Tamara Fernandez Cabada,Binh T. Mai,Nisarg Soni,F. De Donato,Lea Pasquale,Federico Catalano,M. Prato,L. Manna,T. Pellegrino

Published 2023 in ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

ABSTRACT

CuFeS2 chalcopyrite nanoparticles (NPs) can generate heat under exposure to near-infrared laser irradiation. Here, we develop a protocol to decorate the surface of CuFeS2 NPs (13 nm) with a thermoresponsive (TR) polymer based on poly(ethylene glycol methacrylate) to combine heat-mediated drug delivery and photothermal heat damage. The resulting TR-CuFeS2 NPs feature a small hydrodynamic size (∼75 nm), along with high colloidal stability and a TR transition temperature of 41 °C in physiological conditions. Remarkably, TR-CuFeS2 NPs, when exposed to a laser beam (in the range of 0.5 and 1.5 W/cm2) at NP concentrations as low as 40–50 μg Cu/mL, exhibit a high heating performance with a rise in the solution temperature to hyperthermia therapeutic values (42–45 °C). Furthermore, TR-CuFeS2 NPs worked as nanocarriers, being able to load an appreciable amount of doxorubicin (90 μg DOXO/mg Cu), a chemotherapeutic agent whose release could then be triggered by exposing the NPs to a laser beam (through which a hyperthermia temperature above 42 °C could be reached). In an in vitro study performed on U87 human glioblastoma cells, bare TR-CuFeS2 NPs were proven to be nontoxic at a Cu concentration up to 40 μg/mL, while at the same low dose, the drug-loaded TR-CuFeS2-DOXO NPs displayed synergistic cytotoxic effects due to the combination of direct heat damage and DOXO chemotherapy, under photo-irradiation by a 808 nm laser (1.2 W/cm2). Finally, under a 808 nm laser, the TR-CuFeS2 NPs generated a tunable amount of reactive oxygen species depending on the applied power density and NP concentration.

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