University of Illinois Chicago
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Effect of Dendritic Polymer Architecture on Biological Behaviors of Self-Assembled Nanocarriers

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posted on 2017-10-27, 00:00 authored by Hao-Jui Hsu
Polymeric self-assembled nanocarriers represent one of the most versatile platforms for drug delivery. Through tailoring the physiochemical properties of amphiphilic block copolymers, self-assembled nanocarriers with great thermodynamic stability and desired biological properties could be achieved. The PEGylated dendron-based copolymers (PDCs) are one of the novel amphiphilic copolymers that have attracted a great deal of scientific interest due to their unique dendritic structure and properties. While the dendritic polymer architecture of PDC has been shown to enhance the thermodynamic stability of the self-assembling PDCs, dendron micelles, the effect of this polymer architecture on the biological properties of dendron micelles has not yet been studied. Therefore, this dissertation research is focused on understanding the role of dendritic polymer structure on moderating the biological properties of various self-assembled nanocarriers. To systematically investigate this, three studies have been designed and performed. First, we studied whether the dendritic structure of PDC allows dendron micelles to behave non-specific cellular interactions in a similar way that dendrimers would do. Second, cell-specific interactions of dendron micelles mediated by conjugated ligands were investigated. Third, we investigated the influence of dendritic PEG outer shell on micelle-serum protein interactions and its subsequent implication. Our results revealed that both non-specific and specific cellular interactions of dendron micelles were controllable through modulation of the PEG corona length. While the non-specific charge-dependent cellular interactions of dendron micelles were tunable through controlling the length of PEG corona, the use of long PEG tether was found to enhance the ligand-mediated cellular interactions of dendron micelles. With the ligand tethers, a 27-fold enhancement in ligand-mediated cellular interactions can be achieved, compared to non-targeted dendron micelles. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the dense PEG outer shell introduced by its dendritic structure reduced non-specific micelle-serum protein interactions and suppressed the subsequent micelle disintegration or premature drug release, which was not the case for linear block copolymer (LBC)-based micelles. Molecular dynamic (MD) simulation results also supported that dendron micelles exhibited a weaker interaction with serum albumin compared to LBC-based micelles. In the presence of serum proteins, the half-life of dendron micelles was 2-fold longer than that of LBC-based micelles, which could be attributed to their low serum protein interactions. In conclusion, our results provide fundamental understanding on the role of PEG corona and the effect of polymeric architecture on biological properties of polymer micelles, all indicating that dendron micelles have great potential as a novel drug delivery platform.

History

Advisor

Hong, Seungpyo

Chair

Hong, Seungpyo

Department

Biopharmaceutical Sciences

Degree Grantor

University of Illinois at Chicago

Degree Level

  • Doctoral

Committee Member

Král, Petr Jeong, Hyun-Young Gemeinhart, Richard A Khetani, Salman

Submitted date

May 2017

Issue date

2017-04-11

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