posted on 2020-10-03, 12:29authored byKanittha Boonpavanitchakul, Livia K. Bast, Nico Bruns, Rathanawan Magaraphan
Silk
sericin (SS) is a byproduct of silk production. In order to
transform it into value-added products, sericin can be used as a biodegradable
and pH-responsive building block in drug delivery materials. To this
end, amphiphilic substances were synthesized via the conjugation of
hydrophobic polylactide (PLA) to the hydrophilic sericin using a bis-aryl
hydrazone linker. PLA was esterified with a terephthalaldehydic acid
to obtain aromatic aldehyde terminated PLA (PLA-CHO). In addition,
lysine groups of SS were modified with the linker succinimidyl-6-hydrazino-nicotinamide
(S-HyNic). Then, both macromolecules were mixed to form the amphipilic
protein–polymer conjugate in buffer–DMF solution. The
formation of bis-aryl hydrazone linkages was confirmed and quantified
by UV–vis spectroscopy. SS-PLA conjugates self-assembled in
water into spherical multicompartment micelles with a diameter of
around 100 nm. Doxorubicin (DOX) was selected as a model drug for
studying the pH-dependent drug release from SS-PLA nanoparticles.
The release rate of the encapsulated drug was slower than that of
the free drug and dependent on pH, faster at pH 5.0, and it resulted
in a larger cumulative amount of drug released than at physiological
pH of 7.4. The SS-PLA conjugate of high PLA branches showed smaller
particle size and lower loading capacity than the one with low PLA
branches. Both SS-PLA conjugates had negligible cytotoxicity, whereas
after loading with DOX, the SS-PLA micelles were highly toxic for
the human liver carcinoma immortalized cell line HepG2. Therefore,
the SS-based biodegradable amphiphilic material showed great potential
as a drug carrier for cancer therapy.