16 research outputs found
A heparin-mimicking polymer conjugate stabilizes basic fibroblast growth factor.
Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) is a protein that plays a crucial role in diverse cellular functions, from wound healing to bone regeneration. However, a major obstacle to the widespread application of bFGF is its inherent instability during storage and delivery. Here, we describe the stabilization of bFGF by covalent conjugation with a heparin-mimicking polymer, a copolymer consisting of styrene sulfonate units and methyl methacrylate units bearing poly(ethylene glycol) side chains. The bFGF conjugate of this polymer retained bioactivity after synthesis and was stable to a variety of environmentally and therapeutically relevant stressors--such as heat, mild and harsh acidic conditions, storage and proteolytic degradation--unlike native bFGF. Following the application of stress, the conjugate was also significantly more active than the control conjugate system in which the styrene sulfonate units were omitted from the polymer structure. This research has important implications for the clinical use of bFGF and for the stabilization of heparin-binding growth factors in general
Degradable PEGylated protein conjugates utilizing RAFT polymerization
Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-protein therapeutics exhibit enhanced pharmacokinetics, but have drawbacks including decreased protein activities and polymer accumulation in the body. Therefore a major aim for second-generation polymer therapeutics is to introduce degradability into the backbone. Herein we describe the synthesis of poly(poly(ethylene glycol methyl ether methacrylate)) (pPEGMA) degradable polymers with protein-reactive end-groups via reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization, and the subsequent covalent attachment to lysozyme through a reducible disulfide linkage. RAFT copolymerization of cyclic ketene acetal (CKA) monomer 5,6-benzo-2-methylene-1,3-dioxepane (BMDO) with PEGMA yielded two polymers with number-average molecular weight (Mn ) (GPC) of 10.9 and 20.9 kDa and molecular weight dispersities (Ă) of 1.34 and 1.71, respectively. Hydrolytic degradation of the polymers was analyzed by 1H-NMR and GPC under basic and acidic conditions. The reversible covalent attachment of these polymers to lysozyme, as well as the hydrolytic and reductive cleavage of the polymer from the protein, was analyzed by gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. Following reductive cleavage of the polymer, an increase in activity was observed for both conjugates, with the released protein having full activity. This represents a method to prepare PEGylated proteins, where the polymer is readily cleaved from the protein and the main chain of the polymer is degradable
Calculating the mean time to capture for tethered ligands and its effect on the chemical equilibrium of bound ligand pairs
We present here the calculation of the mean time to capture of a tethered ligand to the receptor. This calculation is then used to determine the shift in the partitioning between (1) free, (2) singly bound, and (3) doubly bound ligands in chemical equilibrium as a function of the length of the tether. These calculations are used in the research article Fibroblast Growth Factor 2 Dimer with Superagonist in vitro Activity Improves Granulation Tissue Formation During Wound Healing (Decker et al., in press [1]) to explain quantitatively how changes in polymeric linker length in the ligand dimers modifies the efficacy of these molecules relative to that of free ligands. Keywords: Ligand bindin
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A heparin-mimicking polymer conjugate stabilizes basic fibroblast growth factor.
Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) is a protein that plays a crucial role in diverse cellular functions, from wound healing to bone regeneration. However, a major obstacle to the widespread application of bFGF is its inherent instability during storage and delivery. Here, we describe the stabilization of bFGF by covalent conjugation with a heparin-mimicking polymer, a copolymer consisting of styrene sulfonate units and methyl methacrylate units bearing poly(ethylene glycol) side chains. The bFGF conjugate of this polymer retained bioactivity after synthesis and was stable to a variety of environmentally and therapeutically relevant stressors--such as heat, mild and harsh acidic conditions, storage and proteolytic degradation--unlike native bFGF. Following the application of stress, the conjugate was also significantly more active than the control conjugate system in which the styrene sulfonate units were omitted from the polymer structure. This research has important implications for the clinical use of bFGF and for the stabilization of heparin-binding growth factors in general
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Fibroblast growth factor 2 dimer with superagonist in vitro activity improves granulation tissue formation during wound healing
Site-specific chemical dimerization of fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2) with the optimal linker length resulted in a FGF2 homodimer with improved granulation tissue formation and blood vessel formation at exceptionally low concentrations. Homodimers of FGF2 were synthesized through site-specific linkages to both ends of different molecular weight poly(ethylene glycols) (PEGs). The optimal linker length was determined by screening dimer-induced metabolic activity of human dermal fibroblasts and found to be that closest to the inter-cysteine distance, 70 Ă
, corresponding to 2 kDa PEG. A straightforward analysis of the kinetics of second ligand binding as a function of tether length showed that, as the polymerization index (the number of monomer repeat units in the polymer, N) of the tether decreases, the mean time for second ligand capture decreases as âŒN(3/2), leading to an enhancement of the number of doubly bound ligands in steady-state for a given (tethered) ligand concentration. FGF2-PEG2k-FGF2 induced greater fibroblast metabolic activity than FGF2 alone, all other dimers, and all monoconjugates, at each concentration tested, with the greatest difference observed at low (0.1 ng/mL) concentration. FGF2-PEG2k-FGF2 further exhibited superior activity compared to FGF2 for both metabolic activity and migration in human umbilical vein endothelial cells, as well as improved angiogenesis in a coculture model in vitro. Efficacy in an in vivo wound healing model was assessed in diabetic mice. FGF2-PEG2k-FGF2 increased granulation tissue and blood vessel density in the wound bed compared to FGF2. The results suggest that this rationally designed construct may be useful for improving the fibroblast matrix formation and angiogenesis in chronic wound healing
Homodimeric ProteinâPolymer Conjugates via the Tetrazineâ<i>trans</i>-Cyclooctene Ligation
Tetrazine end-functionalized telechelic
polymers were synthesized
by controlled radical polymerization (CRP) and employed to generate
T4 lysozyme homodimers. Mutant T4 lysozyme (V131C), containing a single
surface-exposed cysteine, was modified with a protein-reactive <i>trans</i>-cyclooctene (T4L-TCO). Reversible additionâfragmentation
chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization yielded polyÂ(<i>N</i>-isopropylÂacrylamide) (pNIPAAm) with a number-average molecular
weight (<i>M</i><sub>n</sub> by <sup>1</sup>H NMR) of 2.0
kDa and a dispersity (<i>Ä</i> by GPC) of 1.05. pNIPAAm
was then modified at both ends by postpolymerization with 6-methylÂtetrazine.
For comparison, 2.0 kDa bis-tetrazine polyÂ(ethylene glycol) (PEG)
and 2.0 kDa bis-maleimide pNIPAAm were synthesized. Ligation of T4L-TCO
to bis-tetrazine pNIPAAm or bis-tetrazine PEG resulted in protein
homodimer in 38% yield and 37% yield, respectively, after only 1 h,
whereas bis-maleimide pNIPAAm resulted in only 5% yield of dimer after
24 h. This work illustrates the advantage of employing tetrazine ligation
over maleimide thiolâene chemistry for the synthesis of protein
homodimer conjugates
Combination of Integrin-Binding Peptide and Growth Factor Promotes Cell Adhesion on Electron-Beam-Fabricated Patterns
Understanding and controlling cell adhesion on engineered
scaffolds
is important in biomaterials and tissue engineering. In this report
we used an electron-beam (e-beam) lithography technique to fabricate
patterns of a cell adhesive integrin ligand combined with a growth
factor. Specifically, micron-sized polyÂ(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels
with aminooxy- and styrene sulfonate-functional groups were fabricated.
Cell adhesion moieties were introduced using a ketone-functionalized
arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) peptide to modify the <i>O</i>-hydroxylamines by oxime bond formation. Basic fibroblast
growth factor (bFGF) was immobilized by electrostatic interaction
with the sulfonate groups. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells
(HUVECs) formed focal adhesion complexes on RGD- and RGD and bFGF-immobilized
patterns as shown by immunostaining of vinculin and actin. In the
presence of both bFGF and RGD, cell areas were larger. The data demonstrate
confinement of cellular focal adhesions to chemically and physically
well-controlled microenvironments created by a combination of e-beam
lithography and âclickâ chemistry techniques. The results
also suggest positive implications for addition of growth factors
into adhesive patterns for cell-material interactions