4.7 Article

PEG-b-poly (carbonate)-derived nanocarrier platform with pH-responsive properties for pancreatic cancer combination therapy

Journal

COLLOIDS AND SURFACES B-BIOINTERFACES
Volume 174, Issue -, Pages 126-135

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2018.10.069

Keywords

Nanoparticles; Colloids; Block copolymers; pH-responsive nanocarriers; Drug delivery; Pancreatic cancer

Funding

  1. NIH from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) [P20 GM109024]
  2. COBRE Animal Studies Core Facility
  3. NSF [0923354]
  4. NIH from the National Center for Research Resources [2P20 RR015566]
  5. NIH [1R01 GM 114080]
  6. NSF from the < GS9 > North Dakota Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) < GS9 > through the Center for Sustainable Materials Science [IIA-1355466]

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A pH-responsive nanoparticle platform, based on PEG-b-poly (carbonate) block copolymers have been proposed that can respond to low pH as found in many cancer micro- and intracellular environment, including that in pancreatic cancer. The hydrophobic domain, i.e., the poly (carbonate) segment has been substituted with tertiary amine side chains, such as N, N'-dibutylethylenediamine (pK(a) = 4.0, DB) and 2-pyrrolidin-1-yl-ethyl-amine (pk(a) = 5.4, Py) to generate two different sets of block copolymers namely PEG-DB and PEG-PY systems. These sidechain appended amines promote disassembly of nanoparticles and activation of drug release in response to pH conditions mimicking extra- (pH 6.9-6.5) and intracellular compartments (5.5-4.5, from early endosome to lysosome) of cancer tissues respectively. A frontline chemotherapy used for pancreatic cancer, i.e., gemcitabine (GEM) and a Hedgehog inhibitor (GDC 0449) has been used as the model combination to evaluate the encapsulation and pH-dependent release efficiency of these block copolymers. We found that, depending on the tertiary amine side chains appended to the polycarbonate segment, these block copolymers self-assemble to form nanoparticles with the size range of 100-150 nm (with a critical association concentration value in the order of 10(-6) M). We also demonstrated an approach where GEM and GDC 0449-encapsulated PEG-DB and PEG-PY nanoparticles, responsive to two different pH conditions, when mixed at a 1:1 vol ratio, yielded a pH-dependent co-release of the encapsulated contents. We envision that such release behaviour can be exploited to gain spatiotemporal control over drug accumulation in pathological compartments with different pH status. The mixture of pH-responsive nanoparticles was found to suppress pancreatic cancer cell proliferation when loaded with anticancer agents in vitro. Cell-proliferation assay showed that both variants of PEG-b-polycarbonate block copolymers were inherently non-toxic. We have also immobilized iRGD peptide on intracellularly activable PEGDB systems to augment cellular uptake. These targeted nanoparticles were found to promote selective internalization of particles in pancreatic cancer cells and tumor tissue.

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