Xiaorui Wang
University of Science and Technology of China
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Publication
Featured researches published by Xiaorui Wang.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Xianglong Hu; Guhuan Liu; Yang Li; Xiaorui Wang; Shiyong Liu
The rational design of theranostic nanoparticles exhibiting synergistic turn-on of therapeutic potency and enhanced diagnostic imaging in response to tumor milieu is critical for efficient personalized cancer chemotherapy. We herein fabricate self-reporting theranostic drug nanocarriers based on hyperbranched polyprodrug amphiphiles (hPAs) consisting of hyperbranched cores conjugated with reduction-activatable camptothecin prodrugs and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging contrast agent (Gd complex), and hydrophilic coronas functionalized with guanidine residues. Upon cellular internalization, reductive milieu-actuated release of anticancer drug in the active form, activation of therapeutic efficacy (>70-fold enhancement in cytotoxicity), and turn-on of MR imaging (∼9.6-fold increase in T1 relaxivity) were simultaneously achieved in the simulated cytosol milieu. In addition, guanidine-decorated hPAs exhibited extended blood circulation with a half-life up to ∼9.8 h and excellent tumor cell penetration potency. The hyperbranched chain topology thus provides a novel theranostic polyprodrug platform for synergistic imaging/chemotherapy and enhanced tumor uptake.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Xiaorui Wang; Jinming Hu; Guoying Zhang; Shiyong Liu
The development of a highly selective and fast responsive fluorogenic biosensor for diverse analytes ranging from bioactive small molecules to specific antigens is highly desirable but remains a considerable challenge. We herein propose a new approach by integrating substrate-selective enzymatic reactions with fluorogens exhibiting aggregation-induced emission feature. Tyrosine-functionalized tetraphenylethene, TPE-Tyr, molecularly dissolves in aqueous media with negligible fluorescence emission; upon addition of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and H2O2, effective cross-linking occurs due to HRP-catalyzed oxidative coupling of tyrosine moieties in TPE-Tyr. This leads to fluorescence emission turn-on and fast detection of H2O2 with high sensitivity and selectivity. As a validation of the new strategys generality, we further configure it into the biosensor design for glucose through cascade enzymatic reactions and for pathologically relevant antigens (e.g., human carcinoembryonic antigen) by combining with the ELISA kit.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Guhuan Liu; Xiaorui Wang; Jinming Hu; Guoying Zhang; Shiyong Liu
Stimuli-triggered disassembly of block copolymer vesicles or polymersomes has been conventionally achieved via solubility switching of the bilayer-forming block, requiring cooperative changes of most of the repeating units. Herein we report an alternative approach by incorporating hydrophobic blocks exhibiting stimuli-triggered head-to-tail cascade depolymerization features. Amphiphilic block copolymers bearing this motif self-assemble into self-immolative polymersomes (SIPsomes). By modular design of terminal capping moieties, visible light, UV light, and reductive milieu can be utilized to actuate SIPsomes disintegration into water-soluble small molecules and hydrophilic blocks. The design of SIPsomes allows for triggered drug co-release and controllable access toward protons, oxygen, and enzymatic substrates. We also demonstrate programmed (OR-, AND-, and XOR-type logic) enzymatic reactions by integrating SIPsome encapsulation and trigger/capping moiety-selective cascade depolymerization events.
Angewandte Chemie | 2014
Xiaorui Wang; Guhuan Liu; Jinming Hu; Guoying Zhang; Shiyong Liu
The fabrication of block copolymer (BCP) vesicles (polymersomes) exhibiting synchronized covalent crosslinking and bilayer permeabilization remains a considerable challenge as crosslinking typically leads to compromised membrane permeability. Herein it is demonstrated how to solve this dilemma by employing a stimuli-triggered crosslinking strategy with amphiphilic BCPs containing photolabile carbamate-caged primary amines. Upon self-assembling into polymersomes, light-triggered self-immolative decaging reactions release primary amine moieties and extensive amidation reactions then occur due to suppressed amine pKa within hydrophobic milieu. This leads to serendipitous vesicle crosslinking and the process is associated with bilayer hydrophobicity-to-hydrophilicity transition and membrane permeabilization.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Xiaorui Wang; Jinming Hu; Guhuan Liu; Jie Tian; Huijuan Wang; Ming Gong; Shiyong Liu
We report on the fabrication of photochromic polymersomes exhibiting photoswitchable and reversible bilayer permeability from newly designed poly(ethylene oxide)-b-PSPA (PEO-b-PSPA) diblock copolymers, where SPA is spiropyran (SP)-based monomer containing a unique carbamate linkage. Upon self-assembling into polymersomes, SP moieties within vesicle bilayers undergo reversible phototriggered isomerization between hydrophobic spiropyran (SP, λ2 > 450 nm irradiation) and zwitterionic merocyanine (MC, λ1 < 420 nm irradiation) states. For both SP and MC polymersomes, their microstructures are stabilized by multiple cooperative noncovalent interactions including hydrophobic, hydrogen bonding, π-π stacking, and paired electrostatic (zwitterionic) interactions, with the latter two types being exclusive for MC polymersomes. Control experiments using analogous block copolymers of hydrophobic SP monomer with a carbonate linkage (SPO) and conventional spiropyran methacrylate monomer (SPMA) containing a single ester functionality were then conducted, revealing that carbamate-incurred hydrogen bonding interactions in PEO-b-PSPA are crucial for polymersome stabilization in the zwitterionic MC state. Moreover, reversible phototriggered SP-to-MC polymersome transition is accompanied by membrane polarity and permeability switching from being nonimpermeable to selectively permeable toward noncharged, charged, and zwitterionic small molecule species below critical molar masses. Intriguingly, UV-actuated MC polymersomes possess two types of release modules: (1) sustained release upon short UV irradiation duration by taking advantage of the unexpectedly slow spontaneous MC-to-SP transition kinetics (t1/2 > 20 h) under dark conditions; (2) on-demand and switchable release under alternated UV-vis light irradiation. We further demonstrate photoswitchable spatiotemporal release of 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI, cell nuclei-staining dye) within living HeLa cells.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012
Xiaorui Wang; Jinming Hu; Tao Liu; Guoying Zhang; Shiyong Liu
In this work, we integrated the concept of aggregation-induced emission (AIE) with the specific supramolecular recognition between K+ ions and crown ether moieties to develop more effective fluorometric K+ probes. We synthesized a novel crown ether-functionalized tetraphenylethene (TPE) derivative, TPE-(B15C5)4, via the thiol-ene click reaction of thiol-derivatized TPE, TPE-(SH)4, with maleimide-functionalized benzo-15-crown-5 (B15C5). In TPE-(B15C5)4, the TPE core and four outer B15C5 moieties serve as the AIE-active motif and supramolecular K+-recognizing functionalities, respectively. TPE- (B15C5)4 molecularly dissolves in THF with negligible fluorescence emission. As we have envisaged, upon K+ addition, TPE-(B15C5)4 can be effectively induced to aggregate due to K+-mediated cross-linking via the formation of K+/B15C5 (1/2 molar ratio) molecular recognition complex in a sandwiched manner. This process is concomitantly accompanied with the turn-on of fluorescence emission via the AIE mechanism. Thus, TPE-(B15C5)4 can serve as highly sensitive and selective fluorometric off–on K+ probes.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Yamin Li; Guhuan Liu; Xiaorui Wang; Jinming Hu; Shiyong Liu
Antimicrobial resistance poses serious public health concerns and antibiotic misuse/abuse further complicates the situation; thus, it remains a considerable challenge to optimize/improve the usage of currently available drugs. We report a general strategy to construct a bacterial strain-selective delivery system for antibiotics based on responsive polymeric vesicles. In response to enzymes including penicillinu2005G amidase (PGA) and β-lactamase (Bla), which are closely associated with drug-resistant bacterial strains, antibiotic-loaded polymeric vesicles undergo self-immolative structural rearrangement and morphological transitions, leading to sustained release of antibiotics. Enhanced stability, reduced side effects, and bacterial strain-selective drug release were achieved. Considering that Bla is the main cause of bacterial resistance to β-lactam antibiotic drugs, as a further validation, we demonstrate methicillin-resistant S.u2005aureus (MRSA)-triggered release of antibiotics from Bla-degradable polymeric vesicles, inu2005vitro inhibition of MRSA growth, and enhanced wound healing in an inu2005vivo murine model.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Guhuan Liu; Guofeng Zhang; Jinming Hu; Xiaorui Wang; Mingqiang Zhu; Shiyong Liu
Upon stimuli-triggered single cleavage of capping moieties at the focal point and chain terminal, self-immolative dendrimers (SIDs) and linear self-immolative polymers (l-SIPs) undergo spontaneous domino-like radial fragmentation and cascade head-to-tail depolymerization, respectively. The nature of response selectivity and signal amplification has rendered them a unique type of stimuli-responsive materials. Moreover, novel design principles are required for further advancement in the field of self-immolative polymers (SIPs). Herein, we report the facile fabrication of water-dispersible SIPs with a new chain topology, hyperbranched self-immolative polymers (hSIPs), by utilizing one-pot AB2 polycondensation methodology and sequential postfunctionalization. The modular engineering of three categories of branching scaffolds, three types of stimuli-cleavable capping moieties at the focal point, and seven different types of peripheral functional groups and polymeric building blocks affords both structurally and functionally diverse hSIPs with chemically tunable amplified-release features. On the basis of the hSIP platform, we explored myriad functions including visible light-triggered intracellular release of peripheral conjugated drugs in a targeted and spatiotemporally controlled fashion, intracellular delivery and cytoplasmic reductive milieu-triggered plasmid DNA release via on/off multivalency switching, mitochondria-targeted fluorescent sensing of H2O2 with a detection limit down to ∼20 nM, and colorimetric H2O2 assay via triggered dispersion of gold nanoparticle aggregates. To further demonstrate the potency and generality of the hSIP platform, we further configure it into biosensor design for the ultrasensitive detection of pathologically relevant antigens (e.g., human carcinoembryonic antigen) by integrating with enzyme-mediated cycle amplification with positive feedback and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Sidan Tian; Guhuan Liu; Xiaorui Wang; Tao Wu; Jinxian Yang; Xiaodong Ye; Guoying Zhang; Jinming Hu; Shiyong Liu
The mimicking of biological supramolecular interactions and their mutual transitions to fabricate intelligent artificial systems has been of increasing interest. Herein, we report the fabrication of supramolecular micellar nanoparticles consisting of quaternized poly(ethylene oxide)-b-poly(2-dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate) (PEO-b-PQDMA) and tetrakis(4-carboxylmethoxyphenyl)ethene (TPE-4COOH), which was capable of reversible transition between polyion complexes (PIC) and hydrogen bonding complexes (HBC) with tunable aggregation-induced emission (AIE) mediated by solution pH. At pH 8, TPE-4COOH chromophores can be directly dissolved in aqueous milieu without evident fluorescence emission. However, upon mixing with PEO-b-PQDMA, polyion complexes were formed by taking advantage of electrostatic interaction between carboxylate anions and quaternary ammonium cations and the most compact PIC micelles were achieved at the isoelectric point (i.e., [QDMA(+)]/[COO(-)] = 1), as confirmed by dynamic light scattering (DLS) measurement. Simultaneously, fluorescence spectroscopy revealed an evident emission turn-on and the maximum fluorescence intensity was observed near the isoelectric point due to the restriction of intramolecular rotation of TPE moieties within the PIC cores. The kinetic study supported a micelle fusion/fission mechanism on the formation of PIC micelles at varying charge ratios, exhibiting a quick time constant (τ1) relating to the formation of quasi-equilibrium micelles and a slow time constant (τ2) corresponding to the formation of final equilibrium micelles. Upon deceasing the pH of PIC micelles from 8 to 2 at the [QDMA(+)]/[COO(-)] molar ratio of 1, TPE-4COOH chromophores became gradually protonated and hydrophobic. The size of micellar nanoparticles underwent a remarkable decrease, whereas the fluorescence intensity exhibited a further increase by approximately 7.35-fold, presumably because of the formation of HBC micelles comprising cationic PQDMA coronas and PEO/TPE-4COOH hydrogen-bonded cores, an inverted micellar structures compared to initial PIC micelles. Moreover, the pH-mediated schizophrenic micellar transition from PIC to HBC with tunable AIE characteristic was reversible.
Polymers | 2016
Sidan Tian; Guhuan Liu; Xiaorui Wang; Guoying Zhang; Jinming Hu
The development of novel theranostic nanovectors is of particular interest in treating formidable diseases (e.g., cancers). Herein, we report a new tumor-targetable theranostic agent based on core crosslinked (CCL) micelles, possessing tumor targetable moieties and fluorescence and magnetic resonance (MR) dual imaging modalities. An azide-terminated diblock copolymer, N3-POEGMA-b-P(DPA-co-GMA), was synthesized via consecutive atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP), where OEGMA, DPA, and GMA are oligo(ethylene glycol)methyl ether methacrylate, 2-(diisopropylamino)ethyl methacrylate, and glycidyl methacrylate, respectively. The resulting diblock copolymer was further functionalized with DOTA(Gd) (DOTA is 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetrakisacetic acid) or benzaldehyde moieties via copper(I)-catalyzed alkyne-azide cycloaddition (CuAAC) chemistry, resulting in the formation of DOTA(Gd)-POEGMA-b-P(DPA-co-GMA) and benzaldehyde-POEGMA-b-P(DPA-co-GMA) copolymers. The resultant block copolymers co-assembled into mixed micelles at neutral pH in the presence of tetrakis[4-(2-mercaptoethoxy)phenyl]ethylene (TPE-4SH), which underwent spontaneous crosslinking reactions with GMA residues embedded within the micellar cores, simultaneously switching on TPE fluorescence due to the restriction of intramolecular rotation. Moreover, camptothecin (CPT) was encapsulated into the crosslinked cores at neutral pH, and tumor-targeting pH low insertion peptide (pHLIP, sequence: AEQNPIYWARYADWLFTTPLLLLDLALLVDADEGTCG) moieties were attached to the coronas through the Schiff base chemistry, yielding a theranostic nanovector with fluorescence and MR dual imaging modalities and tumor-targeting capability. The nanovectors can be efficiently taken up by A549 cells, as monitored by TPE fluorescence. After internalization, intracellular acidic pH triggered the release of loaded CPT, killing cancer cells in a selective manner. On the other hand, the nanovectors labeled with DOTA(Gd) contrast agents exhibited increased relaxivity (r1 = 16.97 mM−1·s−1) compared to alkynyl-DOTA(Gd) small molecule precursor (r1 = 3.16 mM−1·s−1). Moreover, in vivo MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) measurements revealed CCL micelles with pHLIP peptides exhibiting better tumor accumulation and MR imaging performance as well.