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Dual‐pH Sensitive Charge‐Reversal Polypeptide Micelles for Tumor‐Triggered Targeting Uptake and Nuclear Drug Delivery
Author(s) -
Han ShiSong,
Li ZeYong,
Zhu JingYi,
Han Kai,
Zeng ZhengYang,
Hong Wei,
Li WenXin,
Jia HuiZhen,
Liu Yun,
Zhuo RenXi,
Zhang XianZheng
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201402865
Subject(s) - micelle , drug delivery , drug , chemistry , dual (grammatical number) , biophysics , drug carrier , targeted drug delivery , nanotechnology , combinatorial chemistry , pharmacology , materials science , medicine , organic chemistry , biology , aqueous solution , art , literature
A novel dual‐pH sensitive charge‐reversal strategy is designed to deliver antitumor drugs targeting to tumor cells and to further promote the nuclei internalization by a stepwise response to the mildly acidic extracellular pH (≈6.5) of a tumor and endo/lysosome pH (≈5.0). Poly( l ‐lysine)‐ block –poly( l ‐leucine) diblock copolymer is synthesized and the lysine amino residues are amidated by 2,3‐dimethylmaleic anhydride to form β‐carboxylic amide, making the polypeptides self‐assemble into negatively charged micelles. The amide can be hydrolyzed when exposed to the mildly acidic tumor extracellular environment, which makes the micelles switch to positively charged and they are then readily internalized by tumor cells. A nuclear targeting Tat peptide is further conjugated to the polypeptide via a click reaction. The Tat is amidated by succinyl chloride to mask its positive charge and cell‐penetrating function and thus to inhibit nonspecific cellular uptake. After the nanoparticles are internalized into the more acidic intracellular endo/lysosomes, the Tat succinyl amide is hydrolyzed to reactivate the Tat nuclear targeting function, promoting nanoparticle delivery into cell nuclei. This polypeptide nanocarrier facilitates tumor targeting and nuclear delivery simultaneously by simply modifying the lysine amino residues of polylysine and Tat into two different pH‐sensitive β‐carboxylic amides.

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