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"acetal cleavage" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Imidazole-Mediated Dual Location Disassembly of Acid-Degradable Intracellular Drug Delivery Block Copolymer Nanoassemblies Jazani AM; Shetty C; Movasat H; Bawa KK; Oh JK; 34050688
CHEMBIOCHEM

 

Title:Imidazole-Mediated Dual Location Disassembly of Acid-Degradable Intracellular Drug Delivery Block Copolymer Nanoassemblies
Authors:Jazani AMShetty CMovasat HBawa KKOh JK
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34050688/
DOI:10.1002/marc.202100262
Publication:Macromolecular rapid communications
Keywords:acetal cleavageacid-responsive degradationamphiphilic block copolymersdrug deliveryenhanced drug release
PMID:34050688 Category: Date Added:2021-05-29
Dept Affiliation: CHEMBIOCHEM
1 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, H4B 1R6, Canada.

Description:

Acid-degradable (or acid-cleavable) polymeric nanoassemblies have witnessed significant progress in anti-cancer drug delivery. However, conventional nanoassemblies designed with acid-cleavable linkages at a single location have several challenges, such as, sluggish degradation, undesired aggregation of degraded products, and difficulty in controlled and on-demand drug release. Herein, a strategy that enables the synthesis of acid-cleavable nanoassemblies labeled with acetaldehyde acetal groups in both hydrophobic cores and at core/corona interfaces, exhibiting synergistic response to acidic pH at dual locations and thus inducing rapid drug release is reported. The systematic analyses suggest that the acid-catalyzed degradation and disassembly are further enhanced by decreasing copolymer concentration (i.e., increasing proton/acetal mole ratio). Moreover, incorporation of acid-ionizable imidazole pendants in the hydrophobic cores improve the encapsulation of doxorubicin, the anticancer drug, through p-p interactions and enhance the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of acetal linkages situated in the dual locations. Furthermore, the presence of the imidazole pendants induce the occurrence of core-crosslinking that compensates the kinetics of acetal hydrolysis and drug release. These results, combined with in vitro cell toxicity and cellular uptake, suggest the versatility of the dual location acid-degradation strategy in the design and development of effective intracellular drug delivery nanocarriers.





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