6533b82ffe1ef96bd1294718
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Phosphonylation Controls the Protein Corona of Multifunctional Polyglycerol-Modified Nanocarriers.
Frederik R. WurmSvenja MorsbachSusanne SchöttlerSophie HammerHolger FreyEvandro M. AlexandrinoAnn Kathrin DannerKatharina LandfesterVolker MailänderVolker Mailändersubject
GlycerolPolymers and PlasticsPolymersBioengineeringProtein Corona02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesPolyethylene GlycolsBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundPEG ratioMaterials ChemistryHumansDrug Carriers021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyPhosphonate0104 chemical sciencesMiniemulsionchemistryDrug deliveryBiophysicsNanoparticlesProtein CoronaAdsorptionNanocarriers0210 nano-technologyEthylene glycolBiotechnologyProtein adsorptiondescription
Nanocarriers are a platform for modern drug delivery. In contact with blood, proteins adsorb to nanocarriers, altering their behavior in vivo. To reduce unspecific protein adsorption and unspecific cellular uptake, nanocarriers are modified with hydrophilic polymers like poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG). However, with PEG the attachment of further functional structures such as targeting units is limited. A method to introduce multifunctionality via polyglycerol (PG) while maintaining the hydrophilicity of PEG is introduced. Different amounts of negatively charged phosphonate groups (up to 29 mol%) are attached to the multifunctional PGs (Mn 2-4 kg mol-1 , Ð < 1.36) by post-modification. PGs are used in the miniemulsion/solvent evaporation procedure to prepare model nanocarriers. Their behavior in human blood plasma is investigated to determine the influence of the negative charges on the protein adsorption. The protein corona of PGylated nanocarriers is similar to PEGylated analogs (on same nanocarriers), but the protein pattern could be gradually altered by the integration of phosphonates. This is the first report on the gradual increase of negative charges on nanocarriers and intriguingly up to a certain amount of phosphonate groups per nanocarrier the protein pattern remains relatively unchanged, which is important for the future design of nanocarriers.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-12-10 | Macromolecular bioscience |