Advanced search
Start date
Betweenand


Role of Membrane Features on the Permeability Behavior of Polymersomes and the Potential Impacts on Drug Encapsulation and Release

Full text
Author(s):
de Oliveira, Fernando A. ; da Silva Batista, Carin Cristina ; Cernoch, Peter ; Sincari, Vladimir ; Jager, Alessandro ; Jager, Eliezer ; Giacomelli, Fernando C.
Total Authors: 7
Document type: Journal article
Source: Biomacromolecules; v. N/A, p. 10-pg., 2023-04-27.
Abstract

Self-assembled bilayer structures such as those produced from amphiphilic block copolymers (polymersomes) are potentially useful in a wide array of applications including the production of artificial cells and organelles, nanoreactors, and delivery systems. These constructs are of important fundamental interest, and they are also frequently considered toward advances in bionanotechnology and nanomedicine. In this framework, membrane permeability is perhaps the most important property of such functional materials. Having in mind these considerations, we herein report the manufacturing of intrinsically permeable polymersomes produced using block copolymers comprising poly[2-(diisopropylamino)-ethyl methacrylate] (PDPA) as the hydrophobic segment. Although being water insoluble at pH 7.4, its pKa(PDPA) similar to 6.8 leads to the presence of a fraction of protonated amino groups close to the physiological pH, thus conducting the formation of relatively swollen hydrophobic segments. Rhodamine B-loaded vesicles demonstrated that this feature confers inherent permeability to the polymeric membrane, which can still be modulated to some extent by the solution pH. Indeed, even at higher pH values where the PDPA chains are fully deprotonated, the experiments demonstrate that the membranes remain permeable. While membrane permeability can be, for instance, regulated by introducing membrane proteins and DNA nanopores, examples of membrane-forming polymers with intrinsic permeability have been seldom reported so far, and the possibility to regulate the flow of chemicals in these compartments by tuning block copolymer features and ambient conditions is of due relevance. The permeable nature of PDPA membranes possibly applies to a wide array of small molecules, and these findings can in principle be translocated to a variety of disparate bio-related applications. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 21/12071-6 - Tailoring colloids through supramolecular interactions: from fundamentals to applications
Grantee:Watson Loh
Support Opportunities: Research Projects - Thematic Grants
FAPESP's process: 19/06634-8 - Manufacturing and biological evaluations of stimuli-responsive polymersomes towards enhanced efficacy of cancer therapies
Grantee:Fernando Carlos Giacomelli
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants
FAPESP's process: 19/12944-0 - Structural and biological evaluations of polyplexes obtained by the complexation of DNA and polyethylenimine derivatives containing alkyl chains and lactose towards the treatment of genetic eye disorders
Grantee:Fernando Augusto de Oliveira
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate