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Polymer drug carriers with enhanced penetration into tumor cells R. Pola, M. Pechar, A. Hoecherl, O. Janoušková, K. Ulbrich Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry, CAS, Prague, Czech Republic Scheme of targeted polymeric drug delivery system Low molecular drug Targeted polymer drug Drug TM low specificity side effects (toxicity for healthy tissue) low bioavailability - rapid excretion need of repeated dosage fast degradation - inactivation Drug decrease acute toxicity (no activity during transport) organ- or cell-specific delivery (targeting) controlled release (activation at the site of required therapeutic effect) prolong circulation pH-controlled activation X Enzymatic activation Binding of Ab or targeting peptides to polymer carrier Targeting moieties (TM): Antibodies (Ab) or their fragments (afinity X characterization, modification, price) Peptides (synthesis, modification, price X afinity) Multivalent covalent modification of Ab Covalent attachment Drug TM Drug Tumor cell Possible damage of binding site decrease of binding activity Normal cell Specific, non-destructive Synthesis of peptide sequences (targeting and CPP) DIPEA, DCM 1) 20% PIP/DMF 2) Fmoc-aa, PyBOP, HOBt, DIPEA 3) repeat steps 1 and 2 peptide Fmoc peptide 1) 25% PIP/DMF 2) Fmoc-Peg4 , PyBOP, HOBt, DIPEA 3) 25% PIP/DMF 4) 5-azidopentanoic acid, PyBOP, HOBt 5) TFA Prepared peptides – TP: GRGDG, c(RGDfK), c(DRfGK) - CPP: R9F2, PFVYLI, YARAAARQARA Synthesis of peptide-polymer conjugates using “click” chemistry catalyzed by Cu(I) DMSO, AIBN 60 oC, 6 h HPMA Dy-633 DMF peptide CuSO4, sodium ascorbate peptide Dy-633 GRGDG, c(RGDfK), c(DRfGK) PFVYLI, R9F2 Dy-633 Intensity of fluorescence after 48 hrs of incubation with cells Mean fluorescence intensity 6000 5000 4000 3000 HUVEC 3T3 SW620 EL-4 2000 1000 0 Control polymer 2,6 GRGDG 5,1 13,5 c(RGDfK) c(DRfGK) 13,5 12,5 Cells wt % peptide CELL CULTURE STUDIES kinetic flow cytometry (FACS) Polymer with PFVYLI peptide Polymer with R9F2 peptide 37 °C The uptake into Jurkat cells over-time (endocytosis inhibited in 4°C). The fluorescence in cells incubated with 0.65 µM control polymer. 4 °C Control polymer Confocal fluorescent microscopy Control polymer Polymer with PFVYLI peptide Polymer with R9F2 peptide The rapid visualization of Jurkat cells at the conjugates concentration 1.3 µM. The fluorescence of control polymer was measured as a control; the nuclei were dyed with Hoechst (blue). Synthesis of peptide-polymer conjugates using “click” chemistry with Ru complexes Pir X Pir DMF DIPEA Cu(I) peptide CpRuCl(COD) DMF - Ar Pir Ruthenium complex can be used for preparation of conjugates with Pir Ruthenium catalyst is deactivated with air oxygen, Ar atmosphere is necessary Heterogeneous reaction, contamination of the sample by ruthenium Poor solubility of the ruthenium complexes Pir peptide Synthesis of peptide-polymer conjugates using copper-free “click” chemistry CTA, ABIN t-BuOH 10% DMSO 24 h, 70°C HPMA Ma-GFLG-TT ABIN DMSO 2 h, 80°C Pir DBCO-NH2 H2O - Ar methanol DMA DMF DMSO Oxygen is not an inhibitor of “click” reaction Metal free system, no contamination by catalyst Reactive in water, methanol, DMA, DMF and DMSO Pir GRGDG, c(RGDfK), c(DRfGK) peptide PFVYLI, R9F2 Analysis and measuring cell viability/Cytotoxicity peptide wt % Pir wt % IC50 µg/ml MW g/mol IP HPMA-co-Ma-GFLG-co-MaGFLG-DBCO 0.0 0.0 - 46 000 1.08 HPMA-co-Ma-GFLG-co-MaGFLG-Pirarubicin 0.0 9.0 5.9 41 000 1.15 HPMA-co-Ma-GFLG-DBCO-coMa-GFLG-Pirarubicin 0.0 10.2 3.9 58 000 1.13 HPMA-co-Ma-GFLG-PEG-R9F2 -co-Ma-GFLG-Pirarubicin 10.0 9.3 18.8 58 000 1.17 Pirarubicin 0.0 100 0.06 CONJUGATES Release of Pirarubicine from polymer incubated in phosphate buffer pH 7.4 in presence or absence of cathepsine B 60 Pirarubicin atached via GFLG spacer is stable during the circulation in the blood stream and release occurs in the secondary lysosomes of cells due to the attack of the lysosomal enzymes. Pir released, % 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Time, h without cath B with cath B 60 Summary Synthesis of targeting and cell-penetrating peptides terminated by azido group using Fmoc solid-phase strategy. We prepared fluorescently labeled polymers •targeted by RGD-based peptides and showed the possibility of targeting these conjugates to HUVEC and 3T3 cells •with CPP and improved the cell penetration to cancer cells. We showed fast uptake to apoptotic cells, no such uptake with control polymer We demonstrated possibility of using “click” chemistry for conjugation of the unprotected peptide-azides to DBCO-bearing copolymers of p(HPMA) with drug Pir prepared by RAFT polymerization resulting in conjugates with low polydispersity IC50 value and release of Pir is not influenced by the presence of peptides on polymer backbone Acknowledgement Anna Vankova, Michal Pechar, Anita Hoecherl, Olga Janouskova and Karel Ulbrich This work was supported by the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic (grant No. EE2.3.30.0029) Thank you for your attention