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Tuning the Cross-Linking Density and Cross-Linker in Core Cross-Linked Polymeric Micelles and Its Effects on the Particle Stability in Human Blood Plasma and Mice.

Tobias A BauerIrina AlbergLydia A ZengerlingPol BeseniusKaloian KoynovBram SlütterRudolf ZentelIvo QueHeyang ZhangMatthias Barz
Published in: Biomacromolecules (2023)
Core cross-linked polymeric micelles (CCPMs) are designed to improve the therapeutic profile of hydrophobic drugs, reduce or completely avoid protein corona formation, and offer prolonged circulation times, a prerequisite for passive or active targeting. In this study, we tuned the CCPM stability by using bifunctional or trifunctional cross-linkers and varying the cross-linkable polymer block length. For CCPMs, amphiphilic thiol-reactive polypept(o)ides of polysarcosine- block -poly( S -ethylsulfonyl-l-cysteine) [pSar- b -pCys(SO 2 Et)] were employed. While the pCys(SO 2 Et) chain lengths varied from X n = 17 to 30, bivalent (derivatives of dihydrolipoic acid) and trivalent (sarcosine/cysteine pentapeptide) cross-linkers have been applied. Asymmetrical flow field-flow fraction (AF4) displayed the absence of aggregates in human plasma, yet for non-cross-linked PM and CCPMs cross-linked with dihydrolipoic acid at [pCys(SO 2 Et)] 17 , increasing the cross-linking density or the pCys(SO 2 Et) chain lengths led to stable CCPMs. Interestingly, circulation time and biodistribution in mice of non-cross-linked and bivalently cross-linked CCPMs are comparable, while the trivalent peptide cross-linkers enhance the circulation half-life from 11 to 19 h.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • cancer therapy
  • drug release
  • air pollution
  • heavy metals
  • adipose tissue
  • risk assessment
  • computed tomography
  • fluorescent probe
  • living cells
  • wild type
  • pet ct
  • pluripotent stem cells