Author:
Khine YeeYee,Li Yimeng,Ge Wei,Stenzel Martina H.
Abstract
AbstractPeptide drugs are increasingly used to treat a variety of diseases ranging from cancer, and infections to cardiovascular diseases. However, peptides can suffer from low stability in the bloodstream. Entrapment of peptides into nano-sized carriers of various types has widely been explored, but all of them have spherical shapes. Nanocellulose can in contrast serve as a non-spherical nanoparticle with a high aspect ratio. After the isolation of nanocellulose by TEMPO-mediated oxidation, the material needs to be modified with polymers to generate nanoparticles with high water-solubility that can also favourably interact with peptide drugs. We have here chosen insulin as the model drug, which can strongly interact with cationic polymers. As it is known that cationic polymer may retain charged drugs too tightly, we have selected poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl acrylate) PDMAEA as a degradable polymer that undergoes self-hydrolysis to poly(acrylic acid) in water. This polymer was compared to poly(N-(3-(dimethylamino)propyl) acrylamide) PDMAPAA, which is a stable cationic polymer. The cationic polymer was co-grafted with poly(2-hydroxyethyl acrylate) PHEA as a water-soluble neutral polymer using the three-component Passerini reaction. A combination of fluorescence and UV-Vis techniques were used to quantify the amount of polymer that was conjugated to the surface. The polymer-coated nanocellulose was labelled with the fluorescent cyanine dye Cy5 while insulin was labelled with Cy3 creating a FRET system that allows monitoring of the interaction between insulin and polymer in cell growth media. We observed that despite the self-hydrolysis of PDMAEA into a negatively charged polymer, the negatively charged insulin was not released in buffer solution according to the FRET studies. Only the addition of serum-supplemented cell growth media led to insulin release. The limited release was explained with the fact that insulin, as well as other peptides, have a mixture of negative and positive charges, with the pH value and the isoelectric point determining the balance between both. Negative-charged polymers can therefore still interact favourably with negatively charged peptides by interacting with cationic amino acids.
Graphical Abstract
Funder
University of New South Wales
Australian Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC