Insulin Delivery from Glucose-Responsive, Self-Assembled, Polyamine Nanoparticles: Smart "Sense-and-Treat" Nanocarriers Made Easy.
Maximiliano L AgazziSantiago E HerreraMaría Lorena CortezWaldemar A MarmisolléMario TagliazucchiOmar AzzaroniPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2020)
Polyamine-salt aggregates (PSA) are biomimetic soft materials that have attracted great attention due to their straightforward fabrication methods, high drug-loading efficiencies, and attractive properties for pH-triggered release. Herein, a simple and fast multicomponent self-assembly process was used to construct cross-linked poly(allylamine hydrochloride)/phosphate PSAs (hydrodynamic diameter of 360 nm) containing glucose oxidase enzyme, as a glucose-responsive element, and human recombinant insulin, as a therapeutic agent for the treatment of diabetes mellitus (GI-PSA). The addition of increasing glucose concentrations promotes the release of insulin due to the disassembly of the GI-PSAs triggered by the catalytic in situ formation of gluconic acid. Under normoglycemia, the GI-PSA integrity remained intact for at least 24 h, whereas hyperglycemic conditions resulted in 100 % cargo release after 4 h of glucose addition. This entirely supramolecular strategy presents great potential for the construction of smart glucose-responsive delivery nanocarriers.