109 research outputs found

    Hydration forces at solid and fluid biointerfaces

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    We review the different molecular mechanisms giving rise to the repulsive hydration force between biologically relevant surfaces such as lipid bilayers and bio-ceramics. As we will show, the hydration force manifests itself in very different and subtle ways depending on the substrates. Soft, mobile surfaces such as lipid bilayers tend to exhibit monotonic, decaying hydration force, originated from the entropic constriction of the lipid head groups. Solid surfaces on the other hand, tend to exhibit a periodic oscillatory hydration force, originated from the surface induced polarization of water molecules. In this review we will describe both subtle faces of this important interaction by first describing the early experiments performed on solid surfaces and their interpretation by recent simulation studies. Then we will describe the hydration force between fluid interfaces such as bilayers and explain how experimentally researchers have unraveled the dominant role of the lipid head groups conformation

    Etude des propriétés physicochimiques des vecteurs nanoparticulaires

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    Cette thĂšse rapporte l’étude des propriĂ©tĂ©s physicochimiques des nanoparticles polymĂ©riques et leur impact sur l’interaction avec les cellules vivantes. Nous nous sommes tout spĂ©cialement attachĂ©s Ă  Ă©tudier l’effet des propriĂ©tĂ©s adhĂ©sives et mĂ©caniques des nanoparticules sur leur capacitĂ© de pĂ©nĂ©tration de la membrane cellulaire. Pour ce faire, nous avons tout d’abord utilisĂ© des nanoparticules d’acide polylactique (PLA) fonctionnalisĂ©es en surface avec un ligand des sĂ©lectines E et P. Le greffage du ligand sur la particule s’est fait par une nouvelle mĂ©thode expĂ©rimentale garantissant la prĂ©sence du ligand Ă  la surface de la particule durant toute sa durĂ©e de vie. Cette mĂ©thode consiste Ă  mĂ©langer un polymĂšre fonctionnalisĂ© avec le ligand avec un autre polymĂšre non fonctionnalisĂ©. La prĂ©sence du ligand Ă  la surface des nanoparticules formĂ©es Ă  partir de ce mĂ©lange de polymĂšres a Ă©tĂ© confirmĂ©e par analyse ToF SIMS. Nous avons pu prouver que les particules possĂ©dant le ligand greffĂ© Ă  leur surface dĂ©montraient une capacitĂ© adhĂ©sive supĂ©rieure Ă  leurs homologues non fonctionnalisĂ©s sur des cellules endothĂ©liales HUVEC activĂ©es par diffĂ©rentes drogues. De plus, le captage des particules par les cellules HUVEC est modulĂ© par le niveau d’expression des rĂ©cepteurs selectine E et P et aussi par la quantitĂ© de ligand libre. Ces rĂ©sultats montrent clairement que le greffage du ligand confĂšre aux particules des propriĂ©tĂ©s adhĂ©sives accrues et spĂ©cifiques ce qui permet leur usage postĂ©rieure comme vecteur pharmaceutique capable de cibler un rĂ©cepteur particulier Ă  la surface d’une cellule. Nous avons aussi dĂ©montrĂ© que l’interaction entre les nanoparticules et la membrane cellulaire peut aussi ĂȘtre contrĂŽlĂ©e aussi bien par les propriĂ©tĂ©s mĂ©caniques de la cellule que de la nanoparticule. Dans une premiĂšre Ă©tape, nous avons mesurĂ© Ă  l’aide de l’appareil de forces de surface l’élasticitĂ© de cellules macrophagiques dĂ©posĂ©es sur diffĂ©rents substrats. En contrĂŽlant l’interaction entre la cellule et le substrat sur lequel elle repose nous avons montrĂ© qu’il Ă©tait possible de modifier Ă  ii volontĂ© les propriĂ©tĂ©s mĂ©caniques cellulaire. Une augmentation de l’élasticitĂ© cellulaire s’accompagne d’une augmentation systĂ©matique de l’internalisation de nanoparticules de PLA non fonctionnalisĂ©es. Ceci suggĂšre un rĂŽle prĂ©pondĂ©rant des propriĂ©tĂ©s mĂ©caniques du cortex cellulaire dans le captage des nanoparticules de PLA. Dans une seconde Ă©tape, nous avons Ă©tudiĂ© l’effet des propriĂ©tĂ©s mĂ©caniques des nanoparticules sur leur capacitĂ© de pĂ©nĂ©tration cellulaire. Pour ce faire, nous avons synthĂ©tisĂ© des particules d’hydrogel dont l’élasticitĂ© Ă©tait contrĂŽlĂ©e par le degrĂ© d’agent rĂ©ticulant inclus dans leur formulation. Le contrĂŽle des propriĂ©tĂ©s mĂ©caniques des nanoparticules a Ă©tĂ© confirmĂ© par la mesure du module de Young des particules par microscopie de force atomique. L’impact des propriĂ©tĂ©s mĂ©caniques de ces particules sur leur capacitĂ© de pĂ©nĂ©tration dans les cellules vivantes a Ă©tĂ© Ă©tudiĂ© sur des cellules macrophagiques de souris. Les rĂ©sultats ont montrĂ© que la cinĂ©tique d’internalisation, la quantitĂ© de particules internalisĂ©es et le mĂ©canisme d’internalisation dĂ©pendent tous du module de Young des nanoparticules. Aucune diffĂ©rence dans le trajet intracellulaire des particules n’a pu ĂȘtre observĂ©e malgrĂ© le fait que diffĂ©rentes voies d’internalisation aient Ă©tĂ© observĂ©es. Ce dernier rĂ©sultat peut s’expliquer par le fait que les nanoparticules sont internalisĂ©es par plusieurs voie simultanĂ©ment ce qui facilite leur accumulation dans les organelles digestives intracellulaires. Un modĂšle simple permettant d’expliquer ces rĂ©sultats a Ă©tĂ© proposĂ© et discutĂ©.This thesis reports the study of physical chemical properties of polymeric nanoparticles and their impact on the interaction with living cells. In particular we endeavoured to study the effect of the adhesive and mechanical properties of the vector on its capacity of penetration of the cellular membrane. With this intention, we firstly used nanoparticules of polylactic acid (PLA) functionalized on their surfaces with a ligand of the selectines E and P receptor. The grafting of the ligand on the particle’s surface was carried out thanks to a new experimental method guaranteeing the presence of the active molecule on the surface of the particle during its whole life cycle. This method consists in mixing a polymer functionalized with the ligand with another polymer not functionalized. The presence of the ligand on the surface of the nanoparticules formed starting from this mixture of polymers was confirmed by ToF SIMS analysis. We could show that the particles having the ligand grafted on their surface exhibit a higher adhesive capacity than their non-functionalized counterpart on endothelial cells HUVEC activated by various drugs. Nanoparticles adhesion on cells membrane was modulated by the level of expression of the receptors selectine E and P and also by the quantity of free ligand. These results show clearly that the functionalized particles possess all the characteristics of a pharmaceutical vector capable of targeting a particular receptor on a cell surface. The interaction between nanoparticules and cellular membrane can also be controlled by the mechanical properties of the cell as well as of the nanoparticule. To demonstrate it we have measured the elasticity of macrophagic cells deposited on various substrates using the SFA. We have thus showed that it was possible to control the cell mechanical properties at will by controlling the interaction between the cell and the substrate on which it rests. An increase of the cell elasticity is accompanied by an increase of the internalization of non-functionalized PLA nanoparticules. This suggests a major role of cytocortical mechanical properties in the capture of hard PLA particles. iv Lastly, we studied the effect of the mechanical properties of the nanoparticules on their cellular penetration capacity. With this intention, we synthesized hydrogel particles whose elasticity was controlled by the degree of crosslinking agent included in their formulation. The control of the mechanical properties of the nanoparticules was confirmed by the measurement of the Young modulus of the particles by AFM. The interaction of these particles with macrophagess showed that the mechanical properties of the particles affect various aspects related to the internalization of the nanoparticles. The internalization kinetics, the quantity of internalized particles and the mechanism of internalization depend all on the Young modulus of the nanoparticules. No differences in the intracellular pathway could be observed in spite of the fact that various pathways of internalization were observed for these nanoparticules. This last result can be explained by the fact that the nanoparticules are internalized by several mechanisms of simultaneously which facilitates their accumulation in intracellular digestive organelles. A simple model explaining these results is proposed and discussed

    Mechanistic insights into the directed assembly of hydrogel blocks mediated by polyelectrolytes or microgels

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    In this study, we report the directed assembly of hydrogel blocks mediated by electrostatic interactions. We compared two different assembly mechanisms, one mediated by microgel particles and another mediated by direct interaction between oppositely charged blocks. The system consisted of hydrogel blocks made of an interpenetrated network of (hydroxyethyl)methacrylate-poly(ethylene glycol)dimethacrylate (HEMA-PEGDMA) and either positively charged polyethylenimine (PEI) or negatively charged hyaluronic acid (HA). Positively charged hydrogel blocks were pretreated with negatively charged microgel particles (MG) made of N-isopropylacrylamide-methacrylic acid. Both systems (PEI/HA and PEI/MG) demonstrated spontaneous directed assembly, meaning that positive blocks were systematically found in contact with oppositely charged blocks. Directed assembly in water of PEI/HA blocks resulted in large and open aggregates, while PEI/MG blocks exhibited more compact aggregates. Effects of salt and pH were also assessed for both systems. Inhibition of blocks aggregation was found to appear above a critical salt concentration (CSalt*) which was significantly higher for the PEI/HA system (80 mM) compared to the PEI/MG system (5-20 mM). The observed difference was interpreted in terms of the nanostructure of the contact area between blocks. Blocks aggregation was also found to be controlled by the content of negatively charged groups in the microgels as well as the concentration of MG in the suspension (CMG) used to treat the hydrogel block surfaces. Our results shine light on the subtle differences underlying the adhesion mechanisms between hydrogel blocks and suggest new routes toward the design of innovative complex soft materials

    2D, 3D and 4D active compound delivery in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine

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    Recent advances in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine have shown that controlling cells microenvironment during growth is a key element to the development of successful therapeutic system. To achieve such control, researchers have first proposed the use of polymeric scaffolds that were able to support cellular growth and, to a certain extent, favor cell organization and tissue structure. With nowadays availability of a large pool of stem cell lines, such approach has appeared to be rather limited since it does not offer the fine control of the cell micro-environment in space and time (4D). Therefore, researchers are currently focusing their efforts on developing strategies that include active compound delivery systems in order to add a fourth dimension to the design of 3D scaffolds. This review will focus on recent concepts and applications of 2D and 3D techniques that have been used to control the load and release of active compounds used to promote cell differentiation and proliferation in or out of a scaffold. We will first present recent advances in the design of 2D polymeric scaffolds and the different techniques that have been used to deposit molecular cues and cells in a controlled fashion. We will continue presenting the recent advances made in the design of 3D scaffolds based on hydrogels as well as polymeric fibers and we will finish by presenting some of the research avenues that are still to be explored

    Phytoglycogen nanoparticles : nature-derived superlubricants

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    Phytoglycogen nanoparticles (PhG NPs), a single-molecule highly branched polysaccharide, exhibit excellent water retention, due to the abundance of close-packed hydroxyl groups forming hydrogen bonds with water. Here we report lubrication properties of close-packed adsorbed monolayers of PhG NPs acting as boundary lubricants. Using direct surface force measurements, we show that the hydrated nature of the NP layer results in its striking lubrication performance, with two distinct confinement-controlled friction coefficients. In the weak- to moderate-confinement regime, when the NP layer is compressed down to 8% of its original thickness under a normal pressure of up to 2.4 MPa, the NPs lubricate the surface with a friction coefficient of 10–3. In the strong-confinement regime, with 6.5% of the original layer thickness under a normal pressure of up to 8.1 MPa, the friction coefficient was 10–2. Analysis of the water content and energy dissipation in the confined NP film reveals that the lubrication is governed by synergistic contributions of unbound and bound water molecules, with the former contributing to lubrication properties in the weak- to moderate-confinement regime and the latter being responsible for the lubrication in the strong-confinement regime. These results unravel mechanistic insights that are essential for the design of lubricating systems based on strongly hydrated NPs

    Unified scaling of the structure and loading of nanoparticles formed via diffusion-limited coalescence

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    The present study establishes the scaling laws describing the structure of spherical nanoparticles formed by diffusion-limited coalescence. We produced drug-loaded nanoparticles from a poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(d,l-lactic acid) diblock polymer (PEG-b-PLA) by the nanoprecipitation method using different types of micromixing chambers to explore multiple mixing regimes and characteristic times. We first show that the drug loading of the nanoparticles is not controlled by the mixing time but solely by the drug-to-polymer ratio (D:P) in the feed and the hydrophobicity of the drug scaled via the partition coefficient P. We then procure compelling evidence that particles formed via diffusion/coalescence exhibit a relative distribution of PEG blocks between the particle core and its shell that depends only on mixing conditions (not on D:P). Scaling laws of PEG relative distribution and chain surface density were derived in different mixing regimes and showed excellent agreement with experimental data. In particular, results made evident that PEG blocks entrapment in the core of the particles occurs in the slow-mixing regime and favors the overloading (above the thermodynamic limit) of the particles with hydrophilic drugs. The present analysis compiles effective guidelines for the scale up of nanoparticles structure and properties with mixing conditions, which should facilitate their future translation to medical and industrial settings

    Bioinspired microstructures of chitosan hydrogel provide enhanced wear protection

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    We describe the fabrication of physical chitosan hydrogels exhibiting a layered structure. This bilayered structure, as shown by SEM and confocal microscopy, is composed of a thin dense superficial zone (SZ), covering a deeper zone (DZ) containing microchannels orientated perpendicularly to the SZ. We show that such structure favors diffusion of macromolecules within the hydrogel matrix up to a critical pressure, σc, above which channels were constricted. Moreover, we found that the SZ provided a higher wear resistance than the DZ which was severely damaged at a pressure equal to the elastic modulus of the gel. The coefficient of friction (CoF) of the SZ remained independent of the applied load with ÎŒSZ = 0.38 ± 0.02, while CoF measured at DZ exhibited two regimes: an initial CoF close to the value found on the SZ, and a CoF that decreased to ÎŒDZ = 0.18 ± 0.01 at pressures higher than the critical pressure σc. Overall, our results show that internal structuring is a promising avenue in controlling and improving the wear resistance of soft materials such as hydrogels

    Effect of polymer architecture on Curcumin 1 encapsulation and release from PEGylated polymer nanoparticles: toward a drug delivery nano-platform to the CNS

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    We developed a nanoparticles (NPs) library from poly(ethylene glycol)–poly lactic acid comb-like polymers with variable amount of PEG. Curcumin was encapsulated in the NPs with a view to develop a delivery platform to treat diseases involving oxidative stress affecting the CNS. We observed a sharp decrease in size between 15 and 20% w/w of PEG which corresponds to a transition from a large solid particle structure to a “micelle-like” or “polymer nano-aggregate” structure. Drug loading, loading efficacy and release kinetics were determined. The diffusion coefficients of curcumin in NPs were determined using a mathematical modeling. The higher diffusion was observed for solid particles compared to “polymer nano-aggregate” particles. NPs did not present any significant toxicity when tested in vitro on a neuronal cell line. Moreover, the ability of NPs carrying curcumin to prevent oxidative stress was evidenced and linked to polymer architecture and NPs organization. Our study showed the intimate relationship between the polymer architecture and the biophysical properties of the resulting NPs and sheds light on new approaches to design efficient NP-based drug carriers

    Release kinetics from nano-inclusion-based and affinity-based hydrogels: A comparative study

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    In this study, we compare the release mechanisms from nanocomposite hydrogels. Liposomes made of different compositions of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) and 1,2-dihexadecanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC), nanogels made of chitosan-hyaluronic acid association and crosslinked nanogels made of Nisopropylacrylamide (NIPAM) and different ratios of methacrylic acid (MAA) were embedded in acrylamide hydrogels with a model drug, either sulforhodamine B or rhodamine 6G. Liposomes demonstrated the capacity to release their payload over 10 days while NIPAM nanogels and chitosan nanogels released within one or two days. We found that liposomes embedded in hydrogels presented two distinctive release mechanisms, a diffusive burst and a slower “sub-diffusive” release. Both nanogels on the other side presented no observable nor defined affinity-based release mechanism due to presence of salts, completely screening electrostatic interactions. The present work highlights critical points related to the release mechanisms from nanocomposite hydrogels as drug delivery devices or as biomedical tools for tissue engineering or regenerative medicine

    Nanoparticle heterogeneity : an emerging structural parameter 2 influencing particle fate in biological media?

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    Drug nanocarriers’ surface chemistry is often presumed to be uniform. For instance, the polymer surface coverage and distribution of ligands on nanoparticles are described with averaged values obtained from quantification techniques based on particle populations. However, these averaged values may conceal heterogeneities at different levels, either because of the presence of particle sub-populations or because of surface inhomogeneities, such as patchy surfaces on individual particles. The characterization and quantification of chemical surface heterogeneities are tedious tasks, which are rather limited by the currently available instruments and research protocols. However, heterogeneities may contribute to some non-linear effects observed during the nanoformulation optimization process, cause problems related to nanocarrier production scale-up and correlate with unexpected biological outcomes. On the other hand, heterogeneities, while usually unintended and detrimental to nanocarrier performance, may, in some cases, be sought as adjustable properties that provide NPs with unique functionality. In this review, results and processes related to this issue are compiled, and perspectives and possible analytical developments are discussed
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