In order to develop targeted pharmaceutical carriers additionally capable of responding certain local stimuli, such as decreased pH values in tumors or infarcts, targeted long-circulating PEGylated liposomes and PEG-phosphatidylethanolamine (PEG-PE)-based micelles have been prepared with several functions. First, they are capable of targeting a specific cell or organ by attaching the monoclonal antimyosin antibody 2G4 to their surface via pNP-PEG-PE moieties. Second, these liposomes and micelles were additionally modified with biotin or TAT peptide (TATp) moieties attached to the surface of the nanocarrier by using biotin-PE or TATp-PE or TATp-short PEG-PE derivatives. PEG-PE used for liposome surface modification or for micelle preparation was made degradable by inserting the pH-sensitive hydrazone bond between PEG and PE (PEG-Hz-PE). Under normal pH values, biotin and TATp functions on the surface of nanocarriers were "shielded" by long protecting PEG chains (pH-degradable PEG 2000 -PE or PEG 5000 -PE) or by even longer pNP-PEG-PE moieties used to attach antibodies to the nanocarrier (non-pH-degradable PEG 3400 -PE or PEG 5000 -PE). At pH 7.5-8.0, both liposomes and micelles demonstrated high specific binding with 2G4 antibody substrate, myosin, but very limited binding on an avidin column (biotin-containing nanocarriers) or internalization by NIH/3T3 or U-87 cells (TATp-containing nanocarriers). However, upon brief incubation (15-to-30 min) at lower pH values (pH 5.0-6.0) nanocarriers lost their protective PEG shell because of acidic hydrolysis of PEG-Hz-PE and acquired the ability to become strongly retained on avidin-column (biotin-containing nanocarriers) or effectively internalized by cells via TATp moieties (TATp-containing nanocarriers). We consider this result as the first step in the development of multifunctional stimuli-sensitive pharmaceutical nanocarriers.
A set of aliphatic and aromatic aldehyde-derived hydrazone(HZ)-based acid-sensitive polyethylene glycol-phosphatidylethanolamine (PEG-PE) conjugates was synthesized and evaluated for their hydrolytic stability at neutral and slightly acidic pH values. The micelles formed by aliphatic aldehyde-based PEG-HZ-PE conjugates were found to be highly sensitive to mildly acidic pH and reasonably stable at physiologic pH, while those derived from aromatic aldehydes were highly stable at both pH values. The pH-sensitive PEG-PE conjugates with controlled pH-sensitivity may find applications in biological stimuli-mediated drug targeting for building pharmaceutical nanocarriers capable of specific release of their cargo at certain pathological sites in the body (tumors, infarcts) or intracellular compartments (endosomes, cytoplasm) demonstrating decreased pH.
With few exceptions, where local administration is feasible, progress towards broad clinical application of gene therapies requires the development of effective delivery systems. Here we report a novel non-viral gene delivery vector, ‘micelle-like nanoparticle’ (MNP) suitable for systemic application. MNP were engineered by condensing plasmid DNA with a chemical conjugate of phospholipid with polyethylenimine (PLPEI) and then coating the complexes with an envelope of lipid monolayer additionally containing polyethylene glycol-phosphatidyl ethanolamine (PEG-PE), resulting in spherical ‘hard-core’ nanoparticles loaded with DNA. MNP allowed for complete protection of the loaded DNA from enzymatic degradation, resistance to salt-induced aggregation, and reduced cytotoxicity. MNP also demonstrated prolonged blood circulation and low RES accumulation. Intravenous injection of MNP loaded with plasmid DNA encoding for the Green Fluorescence Protein (GFP) resulted in an effective transfection of a distal tumor. Thus, MNP provide a promising tool for systemic gene therapy.
Recent developments, combining Raman spectroscopy with optical microscopy, provide a new noninvasive technique to assess and image cellular processes. Of particular interest are the uptake mechanisms of various cytologically active compounds. In order to distinguish the species of interest from their cellular environment spectroscopically, compounds may be labeled with deuterium. Here, we apply Raman microspectroscopy to follow the uptake of liposomal drug carrier systems that have been introduced to deliver biologically active compounds to their site of action within human breast adenocarcinoma MCF-7 cells. The distribution patterns of liposomes and liposomes surfacemodified with a cell-penetrating peptide (TAT-peptide, TATp) have been imaged over time. The spectroscopic information obtained provides a clear evidence for variable rates, as well as different efficiencies of liposome uptake depending on their surface properties. Depending on the experimental setup, the technique may be applied to fixed or living cell organisms.
Liposomes have been prepared loaded with DNA (plasmid encoding for the green fluorescent protein, GFP) and additionally modified with TATp and PEG, with PEG being attached to the liposome surface via both pH-sensitive hydrazone and non-pH-sensitive bonds. The pGFP-loaded liposomal preparations have been administered intratumorarly in tumor-bearing mice and the efficacy of tumor cell transfection was followed after 72 h. The administration of pGFP-TATpliposomes with non-pH-sensitive PEG coating has resulted in only minimal transfection of tumor cells because of steric hindrances for the liposome-to-cell interaction created by the PEG coat, which shielded the surface-attached TATp. At the same time, the administration of pGFP-TATpliposomes with the low pH-detachable PEG resulted in at least three times more efficient transfection since the removal of PEG under the action of the decreased intratumoral pH leads to the exposure of the liposome-attached TATp residues, enhanced penetration of the liposomes inside tumor cells and more effective intracellular delivery of the pGFP. This result can be considered as an important step in the development of tumor-specific stimuli-sensitive drug and gene delivery systems.
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