Size-tunable PEG-grafted copolymers as a polymeric nanoruler for passive targeting muscle tissues

Muscle-targeted drug delivery is a major challenge in nanomedicine. The extravasation of nanomedicines (or nanoparticles) from the bloodstream into muscle tissues is hindered by the continuous endothelium, the so-called blood-muscle barrier. This study aimed to evaluate the optimal size of macromole...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of controlled release 2022-07, Vol.347, p.607-614
Hauptverfasser: Naito, Mitsuru, Watanuki, Yusuke, Toh, Kazuko, Yum, Jongmin, Kim, Beob Soo, Taniwaki, Kaori, Ogura, Satomi, Ishida, Hiroki, Cho, Masaru, Chaya, Hiroyuki, Miyajima, Ken, Yamasaki, Yuichi, Osada, Kensuke, Minegishi, Katsura, Aoki, Yoshitsugu, Miyata, Kanjiro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Muscle-targeted drug delivery is a major challenge in nanomedicine. The extravasation of nanomedicines (or nanoparticles) from the bloodstream into muscle tissues is hindered by the continuous endothelium, the so-called blood-muscle barrier. This study aimed to evaluate the optimal size of macromolecular drugs for extravasation (or passive targeting) into muscle tissues. We constructed a size-tunable polymeric delivery platform as a polymeric nanoruler by grafting poly(ethylene glycol)s (PEGs) onto the poly(aspartic acid) (PAsp) backbone. A series of PEG-grafted copolymers (gPEGs) with a narrow size distribution between 11 and 32 nm in hydrodynamic diameter (DH) were prepared by changing the molecular weight of the PEGs. Biodistribution analyses revealed that accumulation amounts of gPEGs in the muscle tissues of normal mice tended to decrease above their size of ~15 nm (or ~11 nm for the heart). The gPEGs accumulated in the skeletal muscles of Duchenne muscular dystrophy model mice (mdx mice) at a 2–3-fold higher level than in the skeletal muscles of normal mice. At the same time, there was a reduced accumulation of gPEGs in the spleen and liver. Intravital confocal laser scanning microscopy and immunohistochemical analysis showed extravasation and locally enhanced accumulation of gPEGs in the skeletal muscle of mdx mice. This study outlined the pivotal role of macromolecular drug size in muscle-targeted drug delivery and demonstrated the enhanced permeability of 11–32 nm-sized macromolecular drugs in mdx mice. [Display omitted] •Muscle-targeted drug delivery is a significant challenge in nanomedicine.•PEG-grafted copolymers (gPEGs) 11–32 nm in hydrodynamic diameter were synthesized.•gPEG accumulation in normal mouse muscle tissues tended to decrease above gPEG size of ~15 nm.•gPEGs 11–32 nm accumulated highly in the mdx skeletal muscle via EPR-like effect.
ISSN:0168-3659
1873-4995
DOI:10.1016/j.jconrel.2022.05.030