posted on 2020-05-11, 07:13authored byMarzieh Najafi, Hamed Asadi, Joep van den Dikkenberg, Mies J. van Steenbergen, Marcel H. A. M. Fens, Wim E. Hennink, Tina Vermonden
In
this study, a new type of injectable hydrogel called “HyMic”
that can convert into core cross-linked (CCL) micelles upon exposure
to matrix metalloproteinases (MMP’s), was designed and developed
for drug delivery applications. HyMic is composed of CCL micelles
connected via an enzyme cleavable linker. To this end, two complementary
ABA block copolymers with polyethylene glycol (PEG) as B block were
synthesized using atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP). The
A blocks were composed of a random copolymer of N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAM) and either N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide-cysteine
(HPMA-Cys) or N-(2-hydroxypropyl) methacrylamide-ethylthioglycolate
succinic acid (HPMA-ETSA). Mixing the aqueous solutions of the obtained
polymers and rising the temperature above the cloud point of the PNIPAM
block resulted in the self-assembly of these polymers into flower-like
micelles composed of a hydrophilic PEG shell and hydrophobic core.
The micellar core was cross-linked by native chemical ligation between
the cysteine (in HPMA-Cys) and thioester (in HPMA-ETSA) functionalities.
A slight excess of thioester to cysteine groups (molar ratio 3:2)
was used to allow further chemical reactions exploiting the unreacted
thioester groups. The obtained micelles displayed a Z-average diameter of 80 ± 1 nm (PDI 0.1), and ζ-potential
of −4.2 ± 0.4 mV and were linked using two types of pentablock
copolymers of P(NIPAM-co-HPMA-Cys)-PEG-peptide-PEG-P(NIPAM-co-HPMA-Cys) (Pep-NC) to yield hydrogels. The pentablock
copolymers were synthesized using a PEG-peptide-PEG ATRP macroinitiator
and the peptide midblock (lysine-glycine-proline-glutamine-isoleucine-phenylalanine-glycine-glutamine-lysine
(Lys-Gly-Pro-Gln-Gly-Ile-Phe-Gly-Gln-Lys)) consisted of either l- or d-amino acids (l-Pep-NC or d-Pep-NC), of which the l-amino acid sequence is a substrate
for matrix metalloproteases 2 and 9 (MMPs 2 and 9). Upon mixing of
the CCL micelles and the linker (l/d-Pep-NC), the
cysteine functionalities of the l/d-Pep-NC reacted
with remaining thioester moieties in the micellar core via native
chemical ligation yielding a hydrogel within 160 min as demonstrated
by rheological measurements. As anticipated, the gel cross-linked
with l-Pep-NC was degraded in 7–45 days upon exposure
to metalloproteases in a concentration-dependent manner, while the
gel cross-linked with the d-Pep-NC remained intact even after
2 months. Dynamic light scattering analysis of the release medium
revealed the presence of nanoparticles with a Z-average
diameter of ∼120 nm (PDI < 0.3) and ζ-potential of
∼−3 mV, indicating release of core cross-linked micelles
upon HyMic exposure to metalloproteases. An in vitro study demonstrated
that the released CCL micelles were taken up by HeLa cells. Therefore,
HyMic as an injectable and enzyme degradable hydrogel displaying controlled
and on-demand release of CCL micelles has potential for intracellular
drug delivery in tissues with upregulation of MMPs, for example, in
cancer tissues.