Impact of RAFT chain transfer agents on the polymeric shell density of magneto-fluorescent nanoparticles and their cellular uptake

The impact of nanoparticle surface chemistry on cell interactions and especially cell uptake has become evident over the last few years in nanomedicine. Since PEG polymers have proved to be ideal tools for attaining stealthiness and favor escape from the in vivo mononuclear phagocytotic system, the...

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Published inNanoscale Vol. 14; no. 15; pp. 5884 - 5898
Main Authors Blondy, Thibaut, Poly, Julien, Linot, Camille, Boucard, Joanna, Allard-Vannier, Emilie, Nedellec, Steven, Hulin, Phillipe, Hénoumont, Céline, Larbanoix, Lionel, Muller, Robert N, Laurent, Sophie, Ishow, Eléna, Blanquart, Christophe
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Royal Society of Chemistry 14.04.2022
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Summary:The impact of nanoparticle surface chemistry on cell interactions and especially cell uptake has become evident over the last few years in nanomedicine. Since PEG polymers have proved to be ideal tools for attaining stealthiness and favor escape from the in vivo mononuclear phagocytotic system, the accurate control of their geometry is of primary importance and can be achieved through reversible addition-fragmentation transfer (RAFT) polymerization. In this study, we demonstrate that the residual groups of the chain transfer agents (CTAs) introduced in the main chain exert a significant impact on the cellular internalization of functionalized nanoparticles. High-resolution magic angle spinning 1 H NMR spectroscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy permitted by the magneto-fluorescence properties of nanoassemblies (NAs) revealed the compaction of the PEG comb-like shell incorporating CTAs with a long alkyl chain, without changing the overall surface potential. As a consequence of the capability of alkyl units to self-assemble at the NA surface while hardly contributing more than 0.5% to the total polyelectrolyte weight, denser PEGylated NAs showed notably less internalization in all cells of the tumor microenvironment (tumor cells, macrophages and healthy cells). Interestingly, such differentiated uptake is also observed between pro-inflammatory M1-like and immunosuppressive M2-like macrophages, with the latter more efficiently phagocytizing NAs coated with a less compact PEGylated shell. In contrast, the NA diffusion inside multicellular spheroids, used to mimic solid tumors, appeared to be independent of the NA coating. These results provide a novel effort-saving approach where the sole variation of the chemical nature of CTAs in RAFT PEGylated polymers strikingly modulate the cell uptake of nanoparticles upon the organization of their surface coating and open the pathway toward selectively addressing macrophage populations for cancer immunotherapy. Nanoparticles coated with distinct comb-like RAFT pegylated polymers reveal differentiated cell uptake as a function of the PEG compaction that is ruled by the chemical nature of the incorporated RAFT chain transfer agents.
Bibliography:https://doi.org/10.1039/d1nr06769a
Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI
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ISSN:2040-3364
2040-3372
DOI:10.1039/d1nr06769a