Macromolecular antimicrobial agents such as cationic polymers and peptides have recently been under an increased level of scrutiny because they can combat multi-drug-resistant microbes. Most of these polymers are non-biodegradable and are designed to mimic the facially amphiphilic structure of peptides so that they may form a secondary structure on interaction with negatively charged microbial membranes. The resulting secondary structure can insert into and disintegrate the cell membrane after recruiting additional polymer molecules. Here, we report the first biodegradable and in vivo applicable antimicrobial polymer nanoparticles synthesized by metal-free organocatalytic ring-opening polymerization of functional cyclic carbonate. We demonstrate that the nanoparticles disrupt microbial walls/membranes selectively and efficiently, thus inhibiting the growth of Gram-positive bacteria, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and fungi, without inducing significant haemolysis over a wide range of concentrations. These biodegradable nanoparticles, which can be synthesized in large quantities and at low cost, are promising as antimicrobial drugs, and can be used to treat various infectious diseases such as MRSA-associated infections, which are often linked with high mortality.
In a previous report (Young et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2000, 97, 5802-5806), we provided a proof-of-principle for fold recognition of proteins using a homobifunctional amine-specific chemical crosslinking reagent in combination with mass spectrometry analysis and homology modeling. In this current work, we propose a systematic nomenclature to describe the types of peptides that are generated after proteolysis of crosslinked proteins, their fragmentation by tandem mass spectrometry, and an automated algorithm for MS/MS spectral assignment called "MS2Assign." Several examples are provided from crosslinked peptides and proteins including HIV-integrase, cytochrome c, ribonuclease A, myoglobin, cytidine 5-monophosphate N-acetylneuraminic acid synthetase, and the peptide thymopentin. Tandem mass spectra were obtained from various crosslinked peptides using post source decay MALDI-TOF and collision induced dissociation on a quadrupole-TOF instrument, along with their automated interpretation using MS2Assign. A variety of possible outcomes are described and categorized according to the number of modified lysines and/or peptide chains involved, as well as the presence of singly modified (dead-end) lysine residues. In addition, the proteolysis and chromatographic conditions necessary for optimized crosslinked peptide recovery are presented.
Effective drug delivery requires the precise spatial and temporal delivery of therapeutic agents to the target site. To this end, a variety of chemical and physicochemical approaches have been devised to create lipid vesicles (liposomes) that can be triggered to release their contents in a controlled fashion. The triggers include changes in pH, redox potential, temperature, or the level of specific enzymes. We review the chemistries that have recently been applied to exploit the pH and redox potential triggers so as to release vesicle contents in the appropriate biological location.
We describe the synthesis and characterization of a pH-sensitive poly(ethylene glycol)-diortho ester-distearoyl glycerol conjugate (POD). POD was prepared by a one-step synthesis, and its acid sensitivity characterized by TLC. The conjugate was found to be stable at neutral pH for greater than 3 h but degraded completely within 1 h at pH 5. Liposomes composed of 10% of POD and 90% of a fusogenic lipid, dioleoyl phosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) were readily prepared and remained stable for up to 12 h in neutral buffer as shown by photon correlation spectrometry and a liposome contents leakage assay. However, when POD/DOPE liposomes were incubated in acidic pH as mild as 5.5, they aggregated and released most of their contents within 30 min. The kinetics of content release from POD/DOPE liposomes consisted of two phases, a lag phase, and a burst phase. The lag phase is inversely correlated with pH and the logarithm of the length of lag phase showed a linear relationship with the buffer pH. When the POD/DOPE liposomes were incubated in 75% of fetal bovine serum at 37 degrees C, they remained as stable as traditional PEG-grafted liposomes for 12 h but released 84% of the encapsulated ANTS in the following 4 h. Upon intravenous administration into mice, liposomes composed of 10% POD and 90% DOPE were cleared from circulation by a one-compartment kinetics with a half-life of about 200 min. POD is an example for the design of a novel category of pH sensitive lipids composed of a headgroup, an acid-labile diortho ester linker and a hydrophobic tail. The uniquely fast degradation kinetics of POD at pH 5-6 and its ability to stabilize liposomes in serum make the conjugate suitable for applications for triggered drug release systems targeted to mildly acidic bio-environments such as endosomes, solid tumors, and inflammatory tissues.
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