Login / Signup

Esterase-Mediated Sustained Release of Peptide-Based Therapeutics from a Self-Assembled Injectable Hydrogel.

Ketav KulkarniRachel L MinehanTanesh GamotHarold A ColemanSimon BowlesQingqing LinDenham HopperSusan E NorthfieldRichard A HughesRobert E WiddopMarie-Isabel AguilarHelena C ParkingtonMark P Del Borgo
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
A synthetic strategy for conjugating small molecules and peptide-based therapeutics, via a cleavable ester bond, to a lipidated β3-tripeptide is presented. The drug-loaded β3-peptide was successfully co-assembled with a functionally inert lipidated β3-tripeptide to form a hydrogel. Quantitative release of lactose from the hydrogel, by the action of serum esterases, is demonstrated over 28 days. The esterase-mediated sustained release of the bioactive brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) peptide mimics from the hydrogel resulted in increased neuronal survival and normal neuronal function of peripheral neurons. These studies define a versatile strategy for the facile synthesis and co-assembly of self-assembling β3-peptide-based hydrogels with the ability to control drug release using endogenous esterases with potential in vivo applications for sustained localized drug delivery.
Keyphrases