AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how loading the drug curcumin during the polymerization-induced self-assembly (PISA) process affects the formation and morphology of nanoparticles, revealing that drug presence shifts phase diagrams towards different structures.
  • - Using PMPC and MMA as the base polymers, various concentrations of curcumin were tested, resulting in morphological changes observed via electron microscopy, such as transformations from worms to polymersome and micelles to worms.
  • - Findings from techniques like SAXS and SANS indicate that curcumin's location within nanoparticles affects how cells uptake the particles, with increased drug concentrations enhancing the cellular absorption of micelles and worms but reducing it in higher drug-loaded polymersomes due to changes in shell hydration.

Article Abstract

The effect of the hydrophobic block length on the morphologies of polymerization-induced self-assembled (PISA) nanoparticles is well understood. However, the influence of drug loading on the phase morphology of the nanoparticles during the PISA process, and the resulting biological function of PISA nanoparticles, has barely been investigated. In this work, we show that the addition of a drug, curcumin, during the PISA process shifts the phase diagram toward different morphologies. The PISA system was based on hydrophilic poly(2-(methacryloyloxy)ethylphosphorylcholine) (PMPC), which was chain extended with hydrophobic methyl methacrylate (MMA) in various concentrations of curcumin. According to transmission electron microscopy, the presence of curcumin led to the transition of, for example, worms to polymersome and micelles to worms analysis. To understand the interaction between polymer particles and drug, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), and fluorescence lifetime measurements were carried out. These measurements show that curcumin is predominantly located in the core in the case of micelles and worms while it is found in the shell of polymersomes. The change in morphology influences the cellular uptake by MCF-7 cells and the movement of the particles in multicellular cancer spheroids (3D model). With the increasing amount of drug, the cellular uptake of micelles and worms was enhanced with the increasing grafting density of MPC chains, which contrasts the decreasing cellular uptake in the higher drug-loaded polymersomes due to the lower shell hydration.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c09054DOI Listing

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