8 research outputs found

    Polymersome Formation from AB<sub>2</sub> Type 3-Miktoarm Star Copolymers

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    A series of AB2 type 3-miktoarm star copolymers that mimic the natural structure of phospolipids were synthesized using poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) as the A arm and poly(l-lactic acid) (PLLA) as the two B arms. Their ability to self-assemble into polymer vesicles (polymersomes) in aqueous solutions was investigated using a variety of experimental techniques including optical microscopy, confocal laser scanning microscopy, dynamic/static light scattering, transmission electron microscopy, and fluorimetry. Polymersome formation was observed for all the 3-miktoarm polymers tested in a much broader range of the PEG volume fractions (0.2−0.7) than their linear diblock counterparts (0.2−0.4). Furthermore, the water-soluble anticancer drug doxorubicin hydrochloride was successfully encapsulated into the fabricated nano-sized polymersomes, and sustained in vitro release of the loaded drug was observed. Finally, possible mechanisms for the superior vesicle-forming capability of the 3-miktoarm architecture were discussed based on both the geometric and thermodynamic viewpoints

    Tempo-spatial Activation of Sequential Quadruple Stimuli for High Gene Expression of Polymeric Gene Nanocomplexes

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    The clinical application of intracellular gene delivery via nanosized carriers is hindered by intracellular multistep barriers that limit high levels of gene expression. To solve these issues, four different intracellular or external stimuli that can efficiently activate a gene carrier, a gene, or a photosensitizer (pheophorbide A [PhA]) were assessed in this study. The designed nanosized polymeric gene complexes were composed of PhA-loaded thiol-degradable polycation (PhA@RPC) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter-equipped pDNA. After cellular internalization of the resulting PhA@RPC/pDNA complexes, the complexes escaped endosomal sequestration, owing to the endosomal pH-induced endosomolytic activity of RPC in PhA@RPC. Subsequently, intracellular thiol-mediated polycation degradation triggered the release of PhA and pDNA from the complexes. Late exposure to light (for example, 12 h post-treatment) activated the released PhA and resulted in the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Intracellular ROS successively activated NF-κB, which then reactivated the CMV promoter in the pDNA. These sequential, stimuli-responsive chemical and biological reactions resulted in high gene expression. In particular, the time-point of light exposure was very significant to tune efficient gene expression as well as negligible cytotoxicity: early light treatment induced photochemical internalization but high cytotoxicity, whereas late light treatment influenced the reactivation of silent pDNA via PhA-generated ROS and activation of NF-κB. In conclusion, the quadruple triggers, such as pH, thiol, light, and ROS, successively influenced a gene carrier (RPC), a photosensitizer, and a genetic therapeutic, and the tempo-spatial activation of the designed quadruple stimuli-activatable nanosized gene complexes could be potential in gene delivery applications

    Application of Hexanoyl Glycol Chitosan as a Non-cell Adhesive Polymer in Three-Dimensional Cell Culture

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    Cell culture technology has evolved into three-dimensional (3D) artificial tissue models for better reproduction of human native tissues. However, there are some unresolved limitations that arise due to the adhesive properties of cells. In this study, we developed a hexanoyl glycol chitosan (HGC) as a non-cell adhesive polymer for scaffold-based and -free 3D culture. The uniform cell distribution in a porous scaffold was well maintained during the long culutre period on the HGC-coated substrate by preventing ectopic adhesion and migration of cells on the substrate. In addition, when culturing many spheroids in one dish, supplementation of the culture medium with HGC prevented the aggregation of spheroids and maintained the shape and size of spheroids for a long culture duration. Collectively, the use of HGC in 3D culture systems is expected to contribute greatly to creating excellent regenerative therapeutics and screening models of bioproducts

    Tumor-Targeting Transferrin Nanoparticles for Systemic Polymerized siRNA Delivery in Tumor-Bearing Mice

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    Transferrin (TF) is widely used as a tumor-targeting ligand for the delivery of anticancer drugs because the TF receptor is overexpressed on the surface of various fast-growing cancer cells. In this article, we report on TF nanoparticles as an siRNA delivery carrier for in vivo tumor-specific gene silencing. To produce siRNA carrying TF nanoparticles (NPs), both TF and siRNA were chemically modified with sulfhydryl groups that can build up self-cross-linked siRNA-TF NPs. Self-polymerized 5′-end thiol-modified siRNA (poly siRNA, psi) and thiolated transferrin (tTF) were spontaneously cross-linked to form stable NPs (psi-tTF NPs) under optimized conditions, and they could be reversibly degraded to release functional monomeric siRNA molecules under reductive conditions. Receptor-mediated endocytosis of TF induced rapid tumor-cell-specific uptake of the psi-tTF NPs, and the internalized NPs resulted in a downregulation of the target protein in red-fluorescent-protein-expressing melanoma cancer cells (RFP/B16F10) with negligible cytotoxicity. After systemic administration, the psi-tTF NPs showed marked accumulation at the tumor, leading to successful target-gene silencing in vivo. This psi-tTF NP system provided a safe and effective strategy for in vivo systemic siRNA delivery for cancer therapy

    Tumor-Homing Glycol Chitosan-Based Optical/PET Dual Imaging Nanoprobe for Cancer Diagnosis

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    Imaging techniques including computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography (PET) offer many potential benefits to diagnosis and treatment of cancers. Each method has its own strong and weak points. Therefore, multimodal imaging techniques have been highlighted as an alternative method for overcoming the limitations of each respective imaging method. In this study, we fabricated PET/optical activatable imaging probe based on glycol chitosan nanoparticles (CNPs) for multimodal imaging. To prepare the dual PET/optical probes based on CNPs, both <sup>64</sup>Cu radiolabeled DOTA complex and activatable matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-sensitive peptide were chemically conjugated onto azide-functionalized CNPs via bio-orthogonal click chemistry, which was a reaction between azide group and dibenzyl cyclooctyne. The PET/optical activatable imaging probes were visualized by PET and optical imaging system. Biodistribution of probes and activity of MMP were successfully measured in tumor-bearing mice

    Bioorthogonal Copper Free Click Chemistry for Labeling and Tracking of Chondrocytes <i>In Vivo</i>

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    Establishment of an appropriate cell labeling and tracking method is essential for the development of cell-based therapeutic strategies. Here, we are introducing a new method for cell labeling and tracking by combining metabolic gylcoengineering and bioorthogonal copper-free Click chemistry. First, chondrocytes were treated with tetraacetylated N-azidoacetyl-d-mannosamine (Ac<sub>4</sub>ManNAz) to generate unnatural azide groups (-N<sub>3</sub>) on the surface of the cells. Subsequently, the unnatural azide groups on the cell surface were specifically conjugated with near-infrared fluorescent (NIRF) dye-tagged dibenzyl cyclooctyne (DBCO-650) through bioorthogonal copper-free Click chemistry. Importantly, DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes presented strong NIRF signals with relatively low cytotoxicity and the amounts of azide groups and DBCO-650 could be easily controlled by feeding different amounts of Ac<sub>4</sub>ManNAz and DBCO-650 to the cell culture system. For the <i>in vivo</i> cell tracking, DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes (1 × 10<sup>6</sup> cells) seeded on the 3D scaffold were subcutaneously implanted into mice and the transplanted DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes could be effectively tracked in the prolonged time period of 4 weeks using NIRF imaging technology. Furthermore, this new cell labeling and tracking technology had minimal effect on cartilage formation <i>in vivo</i>

    Bioorthogonal Copper Free Click Chemistry for Labeling and Tracking of Chondrocytes <i>In Vivo</i>

    No full text
    Establishment of an appropriate cell labeling and tracking method is essential for the development of cell-based therapeutic strategies. Here, we are introducing a new method for cell labeling and tracking by combining metabolic gylcoengineering and bioorthogonal copper-free Click chemistry. First, chondrocytes were treated with tetraacetylated N-azidoacetyl-d-mannosamine (Ac<sub>4</sub>ManNAz) to generate unnatural azide groups (-N<sub>3</sub>) on the surface of the cells. Subsequently, the unnatural azide groups on the cell surface were specifically conjugated with near-infrared fluorescent (NIRF) dye-tagged dibenzyl cyclooctyne (DBCO-650) through bioorthogonal copper-free Click chemistry. Importantly, DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes presented strong NIRF signals with relatively low cytotoxicity and the amounts of azide groups and DBCO-650 could be easily controlled by feeding different amounts of Ac<sub>4</sub>ManNAz and DBCO-650 to the cell culture system. For the <i>in vivo</i> cell tracking, DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes (1 × 10<sup>6</sup> cells) seeded on the 3D scaffold were subcutaneously implanted into mice and the transplanted DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes could be effectively tracked in the prolonged time period of 4 weeks using NIRF imaging technology. Furthermore, this new cell labeling and tracking technology had minimal effect on cartilage formation <i>in vivo</i>

    Bioorthogonal Copper Free Click Chemistry for Labeling and Tracking of Chondrocytes <i>In Vivo</i>

    No full text
    Establishment of an appropriate cell labeling and tracking method is essential for the development of cell-based therapeutic strategies. Here, we are introducing a new method for cell labeling and tracking by combining metabolic gylcoengineering and bioorthogonal copper-free Click chemistry. First, chondrocytes were treated with tetraacetylated N-azidoacetyl-d-mannosamine (Ac<sub>4</sub>ManNAz) to generate unnatural azide groups (-N<sub>3</sub>) on the surface of the cells. Subsequently, the unnatural azide groups on the cell surface were specifically conjugated with near-infrared fluorescent (NIRF) dye-tagged dibenzyl cyclooctyne (DBCO-650) through bioorthogonal copper-free Click chemistry. Importantly, DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes presented strong NIRF signals with relatively low cytotoxicity and the amounts of azide groups and DBCO-650 could be easily controlled by feeding different amounts of Ac<sub>4</sub>ManNAz and DBCO-650 to the cell culture system. For the <i>in vivo</i> cell tracking, DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes (1 × 10<sup>6</sup> cells) seeded on the 3D scaffold were subcutaneously implanted into mice and the transplanted DBCO-650-labeled chondrocytes could be effectively tracked in the prolonged time period of 4 weeks using NIRF imaging technology. Furthermore, this new cell labeling and tracking technology had minimal effect on cartilage formation <i>in vivo</i>
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