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Tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network

Dynamicity plays a central role in biological systems such as in the cellular microenvironment. Here, the affinity and dynamics of different guest molecules in a transient supramolecular polymer hydrogel system, i.e. the host network, are investigated. The hydrogel system consists of bifunctional ur...

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Autores principales: Schotman, Maaike J. G., Fransen, Peter-Paul, Song, Jiankang, Dankers, Patricia Y. W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9088426/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35558837
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra00346e
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author Schotman, Maaike J. G.
Fransen, Peter-Paul
Song, Jiankang
Dankers, Patricia Y. W.
author_facet Schotman, Maaike J. G.
Fransen, Peter-Paul
Song, Jiankang
Dankers, Patricia Y. W.
author_sort Schotman, Maaike J. G.
collection PubMed
description Dynamicity plays a central role in biological systems such as in the cellular microenvironment. Here, the affinity and dynamics of different guest molecules in a transient supramolecular polymer hydrogel system, i.e. the host network, are investigated. The hydrogel system consists of bifunctional ureido-pyrimidinone (UPy) poly(ethylene glycol) polymers. A monofunctional complementary UPy guest is introduced, designed to interact with the host network based on UPy–UPy interactions. Furthermore, two other guest molecules are synthesized, being cholesterol and dodecyl (c12) guests; both designed to interact with the host network via hydrophobic interactions. At the nanoscale in solution, differences in morphology of the guest molecules were observed. The UPy–guest molecule formed fibers, and the cholesterol and c12 guests formed aggregates. Furthermore, cellular internalization of fluorescent guest molecules was studied. No cellular uptake of the UPy–cy5 guest was observed, whereas the cholesterol–cy5 guest showed membrane binding and cellular uptake. Also the c12–cy5 guest showed cellular uptake. Formulation of the guest molecules into the UPy hydrogel system was done to study the guest–host affinity. No changes in mechanical properties as measured with rheology were found upon guest–hydrogel formulation. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching showed the diffusive properties of the cy5-functionalized guests throughout the host network. The c12 guest displayed a relatively fast mobility, the UPy guest displayed a decrease in mobility, and the cholesterol–guest remained relatively stable in the host network with little mobility. This demonstrates the tunable dynamic differences of affinity-based interaction between guest molecules and the host network. Interestingly, the cholesterol guest is internalized in cells and is robustly incorporated in the hydrogel network, while the UPy guest is not taken up by cells but shows an affinity to the hydrogel network. These results show the importance of guest–hydrogel affinity for future drug release. However, if modified with cholesterol these guests, or future drugs, will be taken up by cells; if modified with a UPy unit this does not occur. In this way both the drug–hydrogel interaction and the cell internalization behavior can be tuned. Regulating the host–guest dynamics in transient hydrogels opens the door to various drug delivery purposes and tissue engineering.
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spelling pubmed-90884262022-05-11 Tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network Schotman, Maaike J. G. Fransen, Peter-Paul Song, Jiankang Dankers, Patricia Y. W. RSC Adv Chemistry Dynamicity plays a central role in biological systems such as in the cellular microenvironment. Here, the affinity and dynamics of different guest molecules in a transient supramolecular polymer hydrogel system, i.e. the host network, are investigated. The hydrogel system consists of bifunctional ureido-pyrimidinone (UPy) poly(ethylene glycol) polymers. A monofunctional complementary UPy guest is introduced, designed to interact with the host network based on UPy–UPy interactions. Furthermore, two other guest molecules are synthesized, being cholesterol and dodecyl (c12) guests; both designed to interact with the host network via hydrophobic interactions. At the nanoscale in solution, differences in morphology of the guest molecules were observed. The UPy–guest molecule formed fibers, and the cholesterol and c12 guests formed aggregates. Furthermore, cellular internalization of fluorescent guest molecules was studied. No cellular uptake of the UPy–cy5 guest was observed, whereas the cholesterol–cy5 guest showed membrane binding and cellular uptake. Also the c12–cy5 guest showed cellular uptake. Formulation of the guest molecules into the UPy hydrogel system was done to study the guest–host affinity. No changes in mechanical properties as measured with rheology were found upon guest–hydrogel formulation. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching showed the diffusive properties of the cy5-functionalized guests throughout the host network. The c12 guest displayed a relatively fast mobility, the UPy guest displayed a decrease in mobility, and the cholesterol–guest remained relatively stable in the host network with little mobility. This demonstrates the tunable dynamic differences of affinity-based interaction between guest molecules and the host network. Interestingly, the cholesterol guest is internalized in cells and is robustly incorporated in the hydrogel network, while the UPy guest is not taken up by cells but shows an affinity to the hydrogel network. These results show the importance of guest–hydrogel affinity for future drug release. However, if modified with cholesterol these guests, or future drugs, will be taken up by cells; if modified with a UPy unit this does not occur. In this way both the drug–hydrogel interaction and the cell internalization behavior can be tuned. Regulating the host–guest dynamics in transient hydrogels opens the door to various drug delivery purposes and tissue engineering. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022-05-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9088426/ /pubmed/35558837 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra00346e Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Schotman, Maaike J. G.
Fransen, Peter-Paul
Song, Jiankang
Dankers, Patricia Y. W.
Tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network
title Tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network
title_full Tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network
title_fullStr Tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network
title_full_unstemmed Tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network
title_short Tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network
title_sort tuning the affinity of amphiphilic guest molecules in a supramolecular polymer transient network
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9088426/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35558837
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra00346e
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