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Synthesis & Evaluation of Novel Mannosylated Neoglycolipids for Liposomal Delivery System Applications

Glycosylated NPs, including liposomes, are known to target various receptors involved in cellular carbohydrate transport, of which the mannoside binding receptors are attracting particular attention for their expression on various immune cells, cancers, and cells involved in maintaining central nerv...

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Autores principales: Mousavifar, Leila, Lewicky, Jordan D., Taponard, Alexis, Bagul, Rahul, Rivat, Madleen, Abdullayev, Shuay, Martel, Alexandrine L., Fraleigh, Nya L., Nakamura, Arnaldo, Veyrier, Frédéric J., Le, Hoang-Thanh, Roy, René
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9692915/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36365120
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14112300
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author Mousavifar, Leila
Lewicky, Jordan D.
Taponard, Alexis
Bagul, Rahul
Rivat, Madleen
Abdullayev, Shuay
Martel, Alexandrine L.
Fraleigh, Nya L.
Nakamura, Arnaldo
Veyrier, Frédéric J.
Le, Hoang-Thanh
Roy, René
author_facet Mousavifar, Leila
Lewicky, Jordan D.
Taponard, Alexis
Bagul, Rahul
Rivat, Madleen
Abdullayev, Shuay
Martel, Alexandrine L.
Fraleigh, Nya L.
Nakamura, Arnaldo
Veyrier, Frédéric J.
Le, Hoang-Thanh
Roy, René
author_sort Mousavifar, Leila
collection PubMed
description Glycosylated NPs, including liposomes, are known to target various receptors involved in cellular carbohydrate transport, of which the mannoside binding receptors are attracting particular attention for their expression on various immune cells, cancers, and cells involved in maintaining central nervous system (CNS) integrity. As part of our interest in NP drug delivery, mannosylated glycoliposomal delivery systems formed from the self-assembly of amphiphilic neoglycolipids were developed, with a C(12)-alkyl mannopyranoside (ML-C(12)) being identified as a lead compoundcapable of entrapping, protecting, and improving the delivery of structurally diverse payloads. However, ML-C(12) was not without limitations in both the synthesis of the glycolipids, and the physicochemical properties of the resulting glycoliposomes. Herein, the chemical syntheses of a novel series of mannosylated neoglycolipids are reported with the goal of further improving on the previous ML-C(12) glyconanoparticles. The current work aimed to use a self-contingent strategy which overcomes previous synthetic limitations to produce neoglycolipids that have one exposed mannose residue, an aromatic scaffold, and two lipid tails with varied alkyl chains. The azido-ending carbohydrates and the carboxylic acid-ending lipid tails were ligated using a new one-pot modified Staudinger chemistry that differed advantageously to previous syntheses. The formation of stable neoglycoliposomes of controllable and ideal sizes (≈100–400 nm) was confirmed via dynamic light scattering (DLS) experiments and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Beyond chemical advantages, the present study further aimed to establish potential improvements in the biological activity of the neoglycoliposomes. Concanavalin A (Con A) agglutination studies demonstrated efficient and stable cross-linking abilities dependent on the length of the linkers and lipid tails. The efficacy of the glycoliposomes in improving cytosolic uptake was investigated using Nile Red as probe in immune and cancer cell lines. Preliminary ex vivo safety assessments showed that the mannosylated glycoliposomes are hemocompatible, and non-immunogenic. Finally, using a model peptide therapeutic, the relative entrapment capacity and plasma stability of the optimal glycoliposome delivery system was evaluated and compared to the previous neoglycoliposomes. Overall, the new lead glycoliposome showed improved biological activity over ML-C(12), in addition to having several chemical benefits including the lack of stereocenters, a longer linker allowing better sugar availability, and ease of synthesis using novel one-pot modified Staudinger chemistry.
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spelling pubmed-96929152022-11-26 Synthesis & Evaluation of Novel Mannosylated Neoglycolipids for Liposomal Delivery System Applications Mousavifar, Leila Lewicky, Jordan D. Taponard, Alexis Bagul, Rahul Rivat, Madleen Abdullayev, Shuay Martel, Alexandrine L. Fraleigh, Nya L. Nakamura, Arnaldo Veyrier, Frédéric J. Le, Hoang-Thanh Roy, René Pharmaceutics Article Glycosylated NPs, including liposomes, are known to target various receptors involved in cellular carbohydrate transport, of which the mannoside binding receptors are attracting particular attention for their expression on various immune cells, cancers, and cells involved in maintaining central nervous system (CNS) integrity. As part of our interest in NP drug delivery, mannosylated glycoliposomal delivery systems formed from the self-assembly of amphiphilic neoglycolipids were developed, with a C(12)-alkyl mannopyranoside (ML-C(12)) being identified as a lead compoundcapable of entrapping, protecting, and improving the delivery of structurally diverse payloads. However, ML-C(12) was not without limitations in both the synthesis of the glycolipids, and the physicochemical properties of the resulting glycoliposomes. Herein, the chemical syntheses of a novel series of mannosylated neoglycolipids are reported with the goal of further improving on the previous ML-C(12) glyconanoparticles. The current work aimed to use a self-contingent strategy which overcomes previous synthetic limitations to produce neoglycolipids that have one exposed mannose residue, an aromatic scaffold, and two lipid tails with varied alkyl chains. The azido-ending carbohydrates and the carboxylic acid-ending lipid tails were ligated using a new one-pot modified Staudinger chemistry that differed advantageously to previous syntheses. The formation of stable neoglycoliposomes of controllable and ideal sizes (≈100–400 nm) was confirmed via dynamic light scattering (DLS) experiments and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Beyond chemical advantages, the present study further aimed to establish potential improvements in the biological activity of the neoglycoliposomes. Concanavalin A (Con A) agglutination studies demonstrated efficient and stable cross-linking abilities dependent on the length of the linkers and lipid tails. The efficacy of the glycoliposomes in improving cytosolic uptake was investigated using Nile Red as probe in immune and cancer cell lines. Preliminary ex vivo safety assessments showed that the mannosylated glycoliposomes are hemocompatible, and non-immunogenic. Finally, using a model peptide therapeutic, the relative entrapment capacity and plasma stability of the optimal glycoliposome delivery system was evaluated and compared to the previous neoglycoliposomes. Overall, the new lead glycoliposome showed improved biological activity over ML-C(12), in addition to having several chemical benefits including the lack of stereocenters, a longer linker allowing better sugar availability, and ease of synthesis using novel one-pot modified Staudinger chemistry. MDPI 2022-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9692915/ /pubmed/36365120 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14112300 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mousavifar, Leila
Lewicky, Jordan D.
Taponard, Alexis
Bagul, Rahul
Rivat, Madleen
Abdullayev, Shuay
Martel, Alexandrine L.
Fraleigh, Nya L.
Nakamura, Arnaldo
Veyrier, Frédéric J.
Le, Hoang-Thanh
Roy, René
Synthesis & Evaluation of Novel Mannosylated Neoglycolipids for Liposomal Delivery System Applications
title Synthesis & Evaluation of Novel Mannosylated Neoglycolipids for Liposomal Delivery System Applications
title_full Synthesis & Evaluation of Novel Mannosylated Neoglycolipids for Liposomal Delivery System Applications
title_fullStr Synthesis & Evaluation of Novel Mannosylated Neoglycolipids for Liposomal Delivery System Applications
title_full_unstemmed Synthesis & Evaluation of Novel Mannosylated Neoglycolipids for Liposomal Delivery System Applications
title_short Synthesis & Evaluation of Novel Mannosylated Neoglycolipids for Liposomal Delivery System Applications
title_sort synthesis & evaluation of novel mannosylated neoglycolipids for liposomal delivery system applications
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9692915/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36365120
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14112300
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