1 research outputs found
Biodegradable pH-Sensitive Poly(ethylene glycol) Nanocarriers for Allergen Encapsulation and Controlled Release
In
the last decades, the number of allergic patients has increased
dramatically. Allergen-specific immunotherapy (SIT) is the only available
cause-oriented therapy so far. SIT reduces the allergic symptoms,
but also exhibits some disadvantages; that is, it is a long-lasting
procedure and severe side effects like anaphylactic shock can occur.
In this work, we introduce a method to encapsulate allergens into
nanoparticles to avoid severe side effects during SIT. Degradable
nanocarriers combine the advantage of providing a physical barrier
between the encapsulated cargo and the biological environment as well
as responding to certain local stimuli (like pH) to release their
cargo. This work introduces a facile strategy for the synthesis of
acid-labile poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-macromonomers that degrade
at pH 5 (physiological pH inside the endolysosome) and can be used
for nanocarrier synthesis. The difunctional, water-soluble PEG dimethacrylate
(PEG-acetal-DMA) macromonomers with cleavable acetal units were analyzed
with <sup>1</sup>H NMR, SEC, and MALDI-ToF-MS. Both the allergen and
the macromonomers were entrapped inside liposomes as templates, which
were produced by dual centrifugation (DAC). Radical polymerization
of the methacrylate units inside the liposomes generated allergen-loaded
PEG nanocarriers. In vitro studies demonstrated that dendritic cells
(DCs) internalize the protein-loaded, nontoxic PEG-nanocarriers. Furthermore,
we demonstrate by cellular antigen stimulation tests that the nanocarriers
effectively shield the allergen cargo from detection by immunoglobulins
on the surface of basophilic leucocytes. Uptake of nanocarriers into
DCs does not lead to cell maturation; however, the internalized allergen
was capable to induce T cell immune responses