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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(51): 59134-59144, 2023 Dec 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38102079

RESUMO

Degradable polymeric micelles are promising drug delivery systems due to their hydrophobic core and responsive design. When applying micellar nanocarriers for tumor delivery, one of the bottlenecks encountered in vivo is the tumor tissue barrier: crossing the dense mesh of cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM). Sometimes overlooked, the extracellular matrix can trap nanoformulations based on charge, size, and hydrophobicity. Here, we used a simple design of a microfluidic chip with two types of ECM and MCF7 spheroids to allow "high-throughput" screening of the interactions between biological interfaces and polymeric micelles. To demonstrate the applicability of the chip, a small library of fluorescently labeled polymeric micelles varying in their hydrophilic shell and hydrophobic core forming blocks was studied. Three widely used hydrophilic shells were tested and compared, namely, poly(ethylene glycol), poly(2-ethyl-2-oxazoline), and poly(acrylic acid), along with two enzymatically degradable dendritic hydrophobic cores (based on hexyl or nonyl end groups). Using ratiometric imaging of unimer:micelle fluorescence and FRAP inside the chip model, we obtained the local assembly state and dynamics inside the chip. Notably, we observed different micelle behaviors in the basal lamina ECM, from avoidance of the ECM structure to binding of the poly(acrylic acid) formulations. Binding to the basal lamina correlated with higher uptake into MCF7 spheroids. Overall, we proposed a simple microfluidic chip containing dual ECM and spheroids for the assessment of the interactions of polymeric nanocarriers with biological interfaces and evaluating nanoformulations' capacity to cross the tumor tissue barrier.


Assuntos
Micelas , Neoplasias , Humanos , Polímeros/química , Polietilenoglicóis/química , Matriz Extracelular , Dispositivos Lab-On-A-Chip , Portadores de Fármacos/química
2.
Nanoscale ; 15(37): 15396-15404, 2023 Sep 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37701949

RESUMO

Self-assembled systems, like polymeric micelles, have become great facilitators for conducting organic reactions in aqueous media due to their broad potential applications in green chemistry and biomedical applications. Massive strides have been taken to improve the reaction scope of such systems, enabling them to perform bioorthogonal reactions for prodrug therapy. Considering these significant advancements, we sought to study the relationships between the architecture of the amphiphiles and the reactivity of their PdII loaded micellar nanoreactors in conducting depropargylation reactions. Towards this goal, we designed and synthesized a series of isomeric polyethylene glycol (PEG)-dendron amphiphiles with different dendritic architectures but with an identical degree of hydrophobicity and hydrophilic to lipophilic balance (HLB). We observed that the dendritic architecture, which serves as the main binding site for the PdII ions, has greater influence on the reactivity than the hydrophobicity of the dendron. These trends remained constant for two different propargyl caged substrates, validating the obtained results. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations of simplified models of the dendritic blocks revealed the different binding modes of the various dendritic architectures to PdII ions, which could explain the observed differences in the reactivity of the nanoreactors with different dendritic architectures. Our results demonstrate how tuning the internal architecture of the amphiphiles by changing the orientation of the chelating moieties can be used as a tool for controlling the reactivity of PdII loaded nanoreactors.

3.
ACS Polym Au ; 2(5): 380-386, 2022 Oct 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36855583

RESUMO

Enzyme-responsive polymeric micelles hold great potential as drug delivery systems due to the overexpression of disease-associated enzymes. To achieve selective and efficient delivery of their therapeutic cargo, micelles need to be highly stable and yet disassemble when encountering their activating enzyme at the target site. However, increased micellar stability is accompanied by a drastic decrease in enzymatic degradability. The need to balance between stability and enzymatic degradation has severely limited the therapeutic applicability of enzyme-responsive nanocarriers. Here, we report a general modular approach for designing stable enzyme-responsive micelles whose enzymatic degradation can be enhanced on demand. The control over their response to the activating enzyme is achieved by stimuli-induced splitting of triblock amphiphiles into two identical diblock amphiphiles, which have the same hydrophilic-lipophilic balance as the parent amphiphile. This architectural transition drastically affects the micelle-unimer equilibrium and therefore increases the sensitivity of the micelles toward enzymatic degradation. As a proof of concept, we designed UV- and reduction-activated splitting mechanisms, demonstrating the ability to use architectural transition as a tool for tuning amphiphile-protein interactions, providing a general solution toward overcoming the stability-degradability barrier for enzyme-responsive nanocarriers.

4.
Macromolecules ; 54(24): 11419-11426, 2021 Dec 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34987270

RESUMO

Polymeric assemblies, such as micelles, are gaining increasing attention due to their ability to serve as nanoreactors for the execution of organic reactions in aqueous media. The ability to conduct organic transformations, which have been traditionally limited to organic media, in water is essential for the further development of important fields ranging from green catalysis to bioorthogonal chemistry. Considering the recent progress that has been made to expand the range of organometallic reactions conducted using nanoreactors, we aimed to gain a deeper understanding of the roles of the hydrophobicity of both the core of micellar nanoreactors and the substrates on the reaction rates in water. Toward this goal, we designed a set of five metal-loaded micelles composed of polyethylene glycol-dendron amphiphiles and studied their ability to serve as nanoreactors for a palladium-mediated depropargylation reaction of four substrates with different log P values. Using dendrons as the hydrophobic block, we could precisely tune the lipophilicity of the nanoreactors, which allowed us to reveal linear correlations between the rate constants and the hydrophobicity of the amphiphiles (estimated by the dendron's cLog P). While exponential dependence was obtained for the lipophilicity of the substrates, a similar degree of rate acceleration was observed due to the increase in the hydrophobicity of the amphiphiles regardless of the effect of the substrate's log P. Our results demonstrate that while increasing the hydrophobicity of the substrates may be used to accelerate reaction rates, tuning the hydrophobicity of the micellar nanoreactors can serve as a vital tool for further optimization of the reactivity and selectivity of nanoreactors.

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