9 research outputs found
Endosomolytic Nano-Polyplex Platform Technology for Cytosolic Peptide Delivery To Inhibit Pathological Vasoconstriction
A platform technology has been developed and tested for delivery of intracellular-acting peptides through electrostatically complexed nanoparticles, or nano-polyplexes, formulated from an anionic endosomolytic polymer and cationic therapeutic peptides. This delivery platform has been initially tested and optimized for delivery of two unique vasoactive peptides, a phosphomimetic of heat shock protein 20 and an inhibitor of MAPKAP kinase II, to prevent pathological vasoconstriction (<i>i.e.</i>, vasospasm) in human vascular tissue. These peptides inhibit vasoconstriction and promote vasorelaxation by modulating actin dynamics in vascular smooth muscle cells. Formulating these peptides into nano-polyplexes significantly enhances peptide uptake and retention, facilitates cytosolic delivery through a pH-dependent endosomal escape mechanism, and enhances peptide bioactivity <i>in vitro</i> as measured by inhibition of F-actin stress fiber formation. In comparison to treatment with the free peptides, which were endowed with cell-penetrating sequences, the nano-polyplexes significantly increased vasorelaxation, inhibited vasoconstriction, and decreased F-actin formation in the human saphenous vein <i>ex vivo</i>. These results suggest that these formulations have significant potential for treatment of conditions such as cerebral vasospasm following subarachnoid hemorrhage. Furthermore, because many therapeutic peptides include cationic cell-penetrating segments, this simple and modular platform technology may have broad applicability as a cost-effective approach for enhancing the efficacy of cytosolically active peptides
Zwitterionic Nanocarrier Surface Chemistry Improves siRNA Tumor Delivery and Silencing Activity Relative to Polyethylene Glycol
Although
siRNA-based nanomedicines hold promise for cancer treatment,
conventional siRNA–polymer complex (polyplex) nanocarrier systems
have poor pharmacokinetics following intravenous delivery, hindering
tumor accumulation. Here, we determined the impact of surface chemistry
on the <i>in vivo</i> pharmacokinetics and tumor delivery
of siRNA polyplexes. A library of diblock polymers was synthesized,
all containing the same pH-responsive, endosomolytic polyplex core-forming
block but different corona blocks: 5 kDa (benchmark) and 20 kDa linear
polyethylene glycol (PEG), 10 kDa and 20 kDa brush-like polyÂ(oligo
ethylene glycol), and 10 kDa and 20 kDa zwitterionic phosphorylcholine-based
polymers (PMPC). <i>In vitro</i>, it was found that 20 kDa
PEG and 20 kDa PMPC had the highest stability in the presence of salt
or heparin and were the most effective at blocking protein adsorption.
Following intravenous delivery, 20 kDa PEG and PMPC coronas both extended
circulation half-lives 5-fold compared to 5 kDa PEG. However, in mouse
orthotopic xenograft tumors, zwitterionic PMPC-based polyplexes showed
highest <i>in vivo</i> luciferase silencing (>75% knockdown
for 10 days with single IV 1 mg/kg dose) and 3-fold higher average
tumor cell uptake than 5 kDa PEG polyplexes (20 kDa PEG polyplexes
were only 2-fold higher than 5 kDa PEG). These results show that high
molecular weight zwitterionic polyplex coronas significantly enhance
siRNA polyplex pharmacokinetics without sacrificing polyplex uptake
and bioactivity within tumors when compared to traditional PEG architectures