posted on 2018-06-19, 00:00authored byHai Wang, Mei Dong, Sarosh Khan, Lu Su, Richen Li, Yue Song, Yen-Nan Lin, Nari Kang, Christopher H. Komatsu, Mahmoud Elsabahy, Karen L. Wooley
Camptothecin
(CPT) is a promising anticancer drug, yet its therapeutic
potential has been limited by poor water solubility and facile hydrolysis
of the lactone form into an inactive carboxylate form at neutral pH.
In this work, a fundamental synthetic methodology was advanced to
allow for the preparation of well-defined functional polyphosphoramidate
(PPA)-based block copolymers that coassembled with CPT into nanoparticles,
which underwent coincident acid-triggered polymer backbone degradation,
nanoparticle disassembly, and CPT release. Encapsulation of CPT by
the PPA polymer inhibited premature hydrolysis of CPT at pH 7.4 and
enabled accelerated CPT release at pH 5.0 (ca. 4× faster than
at pH 7.4). Two degradable oxazaphospholidine monomers, with one carrying
an alkyne group, were synthesized to access well-defined block PPAs
(dispersity, Đ<1.2) via
sequential organobase-catalyzed ring-opening polymerizations (ROP).
The resulting amphiphilic block copolymers (PEOMP-b-PBYOMP) were physically loaded with CPT to achieve well-dispersed
nanotherapeutics, which allowed the aqueous suspension of CPT at concentrations
up to 3.2 mg/mL, significantly exceeding the aqueous solubility of
the drug (<2.0 μg/mL at 37 °C). Cytotoxicity studies
revealed enhanced efficacy of the CPT-loaded nanoparticles over free
CPT in cancer cells and similar toxicity in normal cells.