Elucidation of Protonation Cooperativity of a STING‐Activating Polymer

Author:

Wang Maggie1,Bennett Zachary T.1,Singh Parnavi1,Feng Qiang1,Wilhelm Jonathan1,Huang Gang1ORCID,Gao Jinming1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas TX 75390 USA

Abstract

AbstractStimuli‐responsive nanomaterials have the potential to improve the performance and overcome existing barriers of conventional nanotherapeutics. Molecular cooperativity design in stimuli‐responsive nanomedicine can amplify physiological signals, enabling a cooperative response for improved diagnostic and therapeutic precision. Previously, this work reported an ultra‐pH‐sensitive polymer, PEG‐b‐PC7A, that possesses innate immune activating properties by binding to the stimulator of interferon genes (STING) through polyvalent phase condensation. This interaction enhances STING activation and synergizes with the endogenous STING ligand for robust cancer immunotherapy. Despite its successes in innate immune activation, the fundamental physicochemical and pH‐responsive properties of PC7A require further investigation. Here, this study elucidates the protonation cooperativity driven by the phase transition of PC7A copolymer. The highly cooperative system displays an “all‐or‐nothing” proton distribution between highly charged unimer (all) and neutral micelle (nothing) states without gradually protonated intermediates. The binary protonation behavior is further illustrated in pH‐precision‐controlled release of a representative anticancer drug, β‐lapachone, by PC7A micelles over a noncooperative PE5A polymer. Furthermore, the bimodal distribution of protons is represented by a high Hill coefficient (nH > 9), featuring strong positive cooperativity. This study highlights the nanoscale pH cooperativity of an immune activating polymer, providing insights into the physicochemical characterization and design parameters for future nanotherapeutics development.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas

Cecil and Ida Green Foundation

University of Texas at Dallas

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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