Sunday, July 21, 2019
Properties of Poly(B-amino Ester)s
Properties of Poly(B-amino Ester)s    The poly(b-amino ester)s, a class of biodegradable cationic polymers, were firstlyà  prepared by Chiellini in 198340. These polymers were based on poly(amidoamine)sà  developed in 1970 by Ferruti41, that contain tertiary amines in their backbones andà  can be synthesized by a simple Michael addition reaction of bifunctional aminesà  and bisacrylamides. However, the interest over the use of poly(b-amino ester)s risedà  significantly after its use as transfection reagent at Langer Lab in 200042. The developmentà  of poly(b-amino ester)s emerged by the need to develop a cationic polymerà  for gene delivery with high transfection efficiency and long-term biocompatibilityà  including hydrolyzable moieties easily degradable into non-toxic small moleculeà  byproducts. The synthesis of this polymer can easily be accomplished: withoutà  necessity of independent preparation of specialized monomers; the use of stoichiometricà  amounts of expensive coupling reagents, or amine protecti   on strategies priorà  to polymerization42. The main general objective of the work of mentioned researchà  group was to develop a polymer-based non-viral vector more efficient and less cytotoxicà  than other cationic polymers used at that time for this purpose (such as,à  polyethylenimine (PEI) or poly(L-lysine) (PLL)).  In fact, poly(b-amino ester) approach exhibited a particularly attractive basis forà  the development of new polymer-based transfection vectors for several reasons: theà  polymers contain the required amines (positive charges to complex genetic material);à  readily degradable linkages (by hydrolysis of ester bonds in the polymer backbonesà  may increase the biodegradability and biocompatibility); and multiple analoguesà  could be synthesized directly from compounds commercially available (easy and inexpensiveà  synthesis) allowing to tune polymer properties (like buffering capacity)42.  Besides being used as transfection vector, PbAEs has been also applied in othersà  biomedical areas, such as delivery systems for drugs43;44 or proteins45;46, magneticà  resonance imaging agents47;48, or as scaffold for tissue engineering49;50.  Synthesis and main physicochemical properties of poly(b-amino ester)s  The poly(b-amino ester)s are easily synthesized by the conjugate addition of a primaryà  amine or bis(secondary amine) and a diacrylate, in a one-step reaction withoutà  any side product that need be removed through further purification steps. It can beà  prepared without solvents, catalysts, or complex protecting group strategies42;51.  Depending on the ratio of monomers during the synthesis, poly(b-amino ester)sà  can be tailored to have either amine- or diacrylate-terminated chains. An excess ofà  either diacrylate or amine monomer results in a prevalence of acrylate- or amineterminatedà  poly(b-amino ester)s, respectively52;53.  The synthesis is performed either neat (solvent free) or in anhydrous organicà  solvents to mitigate hydrolytic degradation during synthesis42;54. Normally, experimentsà  using solvents occur at lower temperature and over long periods of timeà  compared to solvent-free formulations. Table 1.3 summarizes the main reactions forà  the synthesis of PbAE and the obtained properties such as molecular weight, polydispersityà  index (à ), solvent solubility or yield.  The most common solvents used are dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), chloroformà  (CHCl3), or dichloromethane (CH2Cl2)57. However, others solvents have also beenà  used, such as methanol, N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) or N,N-dimethylacetamideà  (DMA)59;61ââ¬â63. The solvent used has influence on the final molecular weight of theà  PbAE. For example, the use of CH2Cl2 typically yields higher molecular weightà  polymer compared to THF42.  On the other hand, solvent-free polymerizations maximize monomer concentrations,à  thus favoring the intermolecular addition over intramolecular cyclization reaction64.  The absence of solvent also allows rising temperature resulting in a higherà  reaction rate and a lower viscosity of the reacting mixture, assisting to compensateà  the higher viscosity found on the solvent-free systems. The combination betweenà  increased monomer concentration and reaction temperature resulting in a reductionà  in the reaction time64. The solvent-free reactions also allows the generation of higherà  molecular weight polymers, besides increasing the reaction rate and obviating theà  solvent removal step53;64.  After polymerization, PbAE can be precipitated, normally in cold diethyl ether,à  hexane42, ether65 or ethyl ether58 and/or then dried under vacuum57;65. Frequently, PbAEs are immediately used or stored in the cold conditions (4 _C52;66;67, 0 _C62, orà  -20 _C68ââ¬â70). Some PbAEs should be also kept airproof due to its strong moistureà  absorption ability and easy degradation71.  Concerning to the biodegradation and biocompatibility, PbAEs have been shownà  generally to possess low cytotoxicity and good biocompatibility42;52;61;55;72. Differentà  studies have suggested that PbAEs are significantly less toxic than currently availableà  cationic polymers, such as, PEI and PLL51;64. Nevertheless, the increase of theà  number of carbons in the backbone or side chain is associated to the increase of theà  cytotoxicity73. PbAE degrade under physiological conditions via hydrolysis of theirà  backbone ester bonds to yield small molecular weight b-amino acids biologicallyà  inert derivatives42;51;55;74. Some results revealed that the degradation rate of poly(bà  amino ester)s was highly dependent on the hydrophilicity of the polymer, i.e., theà  more hydrophilic the polymer is, the faster the degradation occurs75;76.  In Table 1.4 are summarized the main characteristic of PbAEs which make themà  a promising polymeric non-viral vector for gene delivery.  Combinatorial libraries  a fast and efficient way to evaluate different poly(bamino ester)s  A fast and efficient way to study the relationships between structure and functionà  in particular material that could be prepared with different reagents is using combinatorialà  libraries. Due to promising preliminar results of PbAEs as non-viral vectors,à  Langer research group reported a parallel approach for the synthesis of hundreds ofà  PbAEs with different structures and the application of these libraries to a rapid andà  high throughput identification of new transfection reagents and structure-function trends. For this purpose, major contributions have been reported52;53;57;66;67;72;75;77;78à  not only exploring the possible structure/function relationships, but also imposingà  an assortment of monomers (amines were denoted by numbers and acrylates by latinà  alphabet letters) used in order to facilitate cataloging of different PbAEs (Table 1.5à  and Tables A.1 and A.2 (Appendix A)).  The first initial library screening was synthesized in 2001 by Lynn51. 140 Differentà  PbAEs from 7 diacrylates and 20 amines were prepared with molecular weightsà  between 2,000 and 50,000 g.mol-1. From this, polymers C93 (Mw = 3180 g.mol-1) andà  G28 (Mw = 9170 g.mol-1) revealing transfection levels 4-8 times higher than controlà  experiments employing PEI. At same time, it was observed that for transfection efficiency,à  high molecular weight was not an important parameter. This work was thenà  completed in 2003 by Akinc57, where biophysical properties and the ability of eachà  polymer/DNA complex to overcome important cellular barriers to gene deliver were investigated. As previous experiments, complexes formed from polymers C93 andà  G28, revealed higher levels of internalization compared to â⬠nakedâ⬠ DNA, displayingà  18- and 32-fold more internalization, respectively. In contrast, the majority of theà  polyplexes were found to be uptake-limited. Regarding d   iameter and zeta potential,à  out of 10 polymer/DNA complexes with the highest internalization rates, allà  had diameters lower than 250 nm and 9 had positive zeta potentials. By measuringà  the pH environment of delivered DNA through fluorescence-based flow cytometryà  protocol using plasmid DNA covalently labeled with fluorescein (pH sensitive) andà  Cy5 (pH insensitive) it was possible to investigate the lysosomal trafficking of theà  polyplexes. The results demonstrated that complexes based on polymers C93 andà  G28 were found to have near neutral pH measurements, indicating that they wereà  able to avoid acidic lysosomal trafficking. In the same year, Akinc64 studied theà  effect of polymer molecular weight, polymer chain end-group, and polymer/DNAà  ratios on in vitro gene delivery. For this purpose, 12 different structures were synthesizedà  based only in two different PbAE (C28 prepared from 1,4-butanediol diacrylateà  and 1-aminobutanol and E28 prepared from 1,6   -hexanediol diacrylate andà  1-aminobutanol) (Figure 1.6.)  These structures were synthesized by varying amine/diacrylate stoichiometric ratios, resulting in PbAEs with either acrylate or amine end-groups and with molecularà  weights ranging from 3,350 to 18,000 g.mol-1. Polymers were then tested, using highà  throughput methods, at nine different polymer/DNA ratios between 10/1 (w/w)à  and 150/1 (w/w). Concerning terminal groups, it was found that amino-terminatedà  polymers transfected cells more effectively than acrylate-terminated polymers. Inà  contrast, none of the acrylate terminated PbAEs mediated appreciable levels ofà  transfection activity under any of the assessed conditions. These findings suggest that end-chains of PbAE have crucial importance in transfection activity. Concerningà  molecular weight effect, highest levels of transfection occurred using the higherà  molecular weight samples of both amine-terminated C28 (Mw _13100 g.mol-1 andà  E28 (Mw _13400 g.mol-1). Regarding the optimal polymer/DNA ratios for theseà     polymers, it was observed a markedly difference, 150/1 (w/w) for C28 and 30/1 forà  E28. These results highlighted the importance of polymer molecular weight, polymer/DNA ratio, and the chain end-groups in gene transfection activity. Moreover, ità  has found the fact that two similar polymer structures, differing only by two carbonsà  in the repeating unit, have different optimal transfection parameters emphasizingà  the usefulness of library screening to perform these optimizations for each uniqueà  polymer structure. Meanwhile, in 2003, Anderson52 described, for the first time,à  a high-throughput and semi-automated methodology using fluid-handling systemsà  for the synthesis and screening of a library of PbAEs to be used as gene carrier.  A crucial feature of these methods was that all process of synthesis, storage, andà  cell-based assays were performed without removing solvent (DMSO). By using theseà  methods, it was possible to synthesize a library of 2350 structurally unique, degradableà  and cationic polymers in a single day and then test those as transfection reagentà  at a rate of _1000 per day. Among PbAEs tested, it was identified 46 polymersà  that transfect in COS-7 as good as or better than PEI. The common characteristicà  among them was the use of a hydrophobic diacrylate monomer. Moreover, in theà  hit structures mono- or dialcohol side groups and linear, bis(secondary amines) areà  over represented. From data obtained from this library, Anderson67, in 2004, continuedà  his study developing a new polymer library of >500 PbAE using monomersà  that led higher transfection efficiency in the previous studies and optimizing theirà  polymerization conditions. The top performing polyplexes were asses   sed by usingà  an in vitro high-throughput transfection efficiency and cytotoxicity assays at different N/P ratios. As previously observed, the most promising polymers are based onà  hydrophobic acrylates and amines with alcohol groups. Among those, C32 stoodà  out due to higher transfection activity with no associated cytotoxicity. The efficiencyà  to deliver DNA was evaluated in mice after intra-tumoral (i.t.) and intra-muscularà  (i.m.) injection. The results revealed important differences. While by i.t injectionà  C32 delivered DNA 4-fold better than jetPEI R , a commercial polymeric non-viralà  vector, by i.m. administration transfection was rarely observed. C32 was then assessedà  for DNA construct encoding the DT-A (DT-A DNA) deliver to cells in cultureà  and to xenografts derived from androgen-sensitive human prostate adenocarcinomaà  cells (LNCaP). Results showed that DT-A DNA was successfully delivered and theà  protein expressed in tumor cells in culture. In hu   man xenografts, the growth wasà  suppressed in 40% of treated tumors. The fact of C32 is non-toxic and it is able toà  transfect efficiently tumors locally and transfects healthy muscle poorly turned it asà  a promising carrier for the local treatment of cancer.  From here, a panoply of results based in PbAE combinatorial library appeared. Inà  2005, Anderson53, prepared a new library of 486 second-generation PbAE based onà  polymers with 70 different primary structures and with different molecular weights.  These 70 polymers were synthesized using monomers previously identified as commonà  to effective gene delivery polymers. This library was then characterized byà  molecular weight of polymers, particle size, surface charge, optimal polymer/DNAà  ratio and transfection efficiency in COS-7 of polymer/DNA complexes. Resultsà  showed that from 70 polymers with primary structures, 20 possess transfection activitiesà  as good as or better than Lipofectamine R 2000, one of the most effective commerciallyà  available lipid reagents. Results also revealed that, in general, the mostà  effective polymers/DNA complexes had   In 2006, Green79, synthesized, on a larger scale and at a range of molecularà  weights, the top 486 of 2350 PbAEs previously assessed52 and studied their ability toà  deliver DNA. These PbAEs were tested, firstly, on the basis of transfection efficacy inà  COS-7 cells in serum-free conditions, and then, the 11 of the best-performing PbAEsà  structures were further analyzed. The transfection conditions were optimized in humanà  umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) in the presence of serum. In thisà  study, the influence of the factors like polymer structure and molecular weight, andà  biophysical properties of the polyplexes (such as, particle size, zeta potential, andà  particle stability throughout time) were studied. The results showed that many ofà  the polyplexes formed have identical biophysical properties in the presence of buffer,à  but, when in the presence of serum proteins their biophysical properties changed differentially,à  influencing the transfection ac   tivity. Concerning to the size, the resultsà  showed that in spite of all vectors condensed DNA into small particles below 150 nmà  in buffer, only a few, such as C32, JJ32 and E28, formed small (_200 nm) and stableà  particles in serum. C32, JJ32 and E28 revealed also high transfection activity bothà  in the absence of serum in COS-7 cell line as in the presence of serum in HUVECà  cell line. Moreover, C32 transfected HUVECs in the presence of serum significantlyà  higher than jetPEI R and Lipofectamine R 2000, the two top commercially availableà  transfection reagents. The 3 mentioned PbAEs share a nearly identical structure.  The acrylate monomers of these polymers, C, JJ, and E, differ by only their carbonà  chain lengths (4, 5, and 6 carbons, respectively). Similarly, amines 20, 28, and 32à  differ also by only the length of their carbon chain (3, 4, and 5 carbons, respectively).  For example, polymers prepared with the same acrylate monomer (C) in which itwas increased the length of the carbons chain of the amine monomer resulted inà  an increased transfection efficacy (C32 (5 carbons) > C28 (4 carbons) > C20 (3 carbons))à  of these polymers-based polyplexes. Interestingly, this study reinforced C32à  as the lead PbAE vector and revealed other potential two, JJ28 and E28, which previouslyà  showedto be poor vectors. On the other hand, C28 and U28, previouslyà  recognized as an efficient transfection reagent, were found to transfect inefficientlyà  HUVEC in serum. By constructing a new library of end-modified PbAE, the researchà  was continued78 in order to understand the structure-function relationshipà  of terminal modification of PbAE in transfection activity. For this purpose, it wasà  used twelve different amine capping reagents to end-modify C32, D60 and C20. Theà  choice of these 3 PbAEs was based in their transfection activity: C32, the most    effective; D60, an effective transfection reagent with a significantly different structureà  from that of C32; and, C20, a poor transfection reagent but with similar structureà  to C32 differing only in the length of the amine monomer. The results showedà  that some PbAEs-based vectors (C32-103 and C32-117) were able to deliver DNA byà  approximately two orders of magnitude higher than unmodified C32, PEI (25,000à  g.mol-1) or Lipofectamine R2000, and, at levels comparable to adenovirus at a reasonablyà  high level of infectivity (multiplicity of infection = 100). Once again, it wasà  demonstrated that small structural changes influence greatly gene delivery, from biophysicalà  properties (such as, DNA binding affinity, particle size, intracellular DNAà  uptake) until final protein expression. From these 3 polymers assessed, C20 was theà  one who transfected cells much less effectively, although it has seen a remarkablyà  improvement with end-modifications. As expected, C   32-based polyplexes, based onà  C32-103 and C32-117, revealed the higher transfection efficiency enhancing cellularà  DNA uptake up to five-fold compared to unmodified C32. Interestingly, and in aà  general way, terminal modifications of C32 with primary alkyl diamines were moreà  effective than those with PEG spacers, revealing that a degree of hydrophobicity atà  the chain ends is an added value for these polymers. Another interesting fact in terminalà  modification of C32 was that at least a three carbon spacer between terminalà  amines is necessary to obtain an efficient gene delivery. For example, results showedà  that C32-103 transfection efficiency is 130- and 300-fold higher than C32-102 on theà  COS-7 and HepG2 cell lines, respectively. As the molecular weight was the same,à  this result demonstrated the critical role of the chain ends in transfection activity.  In order to better understand the role of the chain ends in transfection efficiencyà  a new library of end-modified C32 was synthesized by Zugates80 in 2007 using 37à  different amine molecules to end-modify the PbAE. In a general way, it was observedà  that polymers end-capped with hydrophilic amine end groups containingà  hydroxyls or additional amines led to higher transfection efficiency. On the otherà  hand, terminal-modifications with hydrophobic amines containing alkyl chains orà  aromatic rings proved to be much less effective. Concerning to cytotoxicity, terminalà  modification with primary monoamine reagents (independently of functional groupà  extending from the amine, such as aromatic, alkyl, hydroxyl, secondary and tertiary    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.