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Optimizing Hydrophobic Groups in Amphiphiles to Induce Gold Nanoparticle Complex Vesicles for Stability Regulation Jun Fu, and Liyan Qiu Langmuir, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b02745 • Publication Date (Web): 03 Oct 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 7, 2017
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Optimizing Hydrophobic Groups in Amphiphiles to
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Induce Gold Nanoparticle Complex Vesicles for
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Stability Regulation
4
Jun Fu‡ and Liyan Qiu*,†
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6 7
†
Ministry of Education (MOE) Key Laboratory of Macromolecular Synthesis and
8
Functionalization, Department of Polymer Science and Engineering, Zhejiang University, 38
9
Zheda Road, Hangzhou 310027, China
10 11
‡
College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Zhejiang University, 866 Yuhangtang Road, Hangzhou 310058, China
12 13
14
* Corresponding author. Tel.: +86 571 87952306 E-mail address:
[email protected] 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 1
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ABSTRACT: Polymeric graft polyphosphazene containing 4-aminobenzoic acid
2
diethylaminoethyl ester (DEAAB) as hydrophobic side groups was rationally
3
designed and named PDEP. PDEP can self-assemble into nano-vesicle in water. More
4
importantly, when compared with the amphiphile PEP copolymer containing benzene
5
rings and the amphiphile PDP copolymer containing tertiary amino groups, the
6
co-existence of benzene and tertiary amino groups in PDEP enabled it to effectively
7
load water-soluble small molecule doxorubicin hydrochloride (DOX·HCl) into the
8
vesicle and efficiently induce in situ transformation of gold tetrachloroaurate (HAuCl4)
9
to gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) as both a reductant and a stabilizer. By optimizing the
10
reduction conditions, such as the temperature, reaction time and hydrophobic group in
11
polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio, the AuNP complex PDEP vesicles significantly
12
inhibited the DOX·HCl burst release at pH 7.4 while displaying a fast release
13
responsive to pH 5.5.
14 15
KEYWORDS: gold nanoparticles, vesicles, drug delivery, polyphosphazenes, stability
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2
Recently, nano-scaled polymersomes have become a novel research direction to load
3
water-soluble substances, profiting from their characteristic core-shell architectures,
4
which are similar to those of liposomes but exhibit better chemical stability and
5
functionalization.1,
6
easily they self-assemble into polymersomes just by regulating the ratio of the
7
hydrophilic chains to hydrophobic groups.2 However, the burst drug release is
8
difficult to avoid, especially at high levels of drug loading during the circulation
9
period. For instance, Couffin-Hoarau, A. C. and his co-workers synthesized an
10
amphiphilic poly(organophosphazene) vesicle to load trisodium 8-hydroxypyrene
11
trisulfonate (HPTS).3 It was obvious that the HPTS release percent was approximately
12
32 % in the first 30 min in phosphate buffer solution (PBS) (pH 7.4). Coincidentally,
13
the study reported by Laurencin, C. T.4 addressed the same issue. They co-substituted
14
the open-loop hexachlorocyclotriphosphazene by imidazole and methylphenoxy to
15
load 14C-lableled bovine serum albumin (BSA). The BSA displayed a burst release of
16
more than 25 % of the protein in the first 4 h. For the fellow-up developments of
17
polyphosphazene vesicles, such formulations required adjustment to minimize the
18
drug leakage at pH 7.4; otherwise, the drug would be stuck in the plasma before being
19
delivered to the tissue target. In fact, burst drug release occurs frequently in many
20
other vesicle systems, which would weaken the in vivo treatment effect.5-7
INTRODUCTION
2
Notably, amphiphilic graft polyphosphazenes displayed how
21
Over the last decade, metal nanoparticles have attracted much attention for use in
22
the biomedical field because of their interesting shape- and size-dependent physical
23
and chemical properties.8 Gold nanoparticle (AuNP) is undoubtedly one of the most
24
remarkable members. They can be synthesized in many ways, but the most common
25
method is the reduction of commercial gold tetrachloroaurate (HAuCl4) with
26
appropriate reductants. To prevent AuNPs from aggregating, surfactant molecules are
27
indispensable. For example, Leff, D. V. and his co-workers9 reduced HAuCl4 by
28
NaBH4 in the presence of n-dodecyl mercaptan to achieve a stable colloid of
29
thiol-capped AuNPs. Therefore, a system which can serve both as reductant and 3
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stabilizer to AuNPs is satisfactory to all researchers. In our recent work, we reported a
2
new method to inhibit drug leakage before they arrived at tumor site by taking
3
advantage of AuNPs as inorganic crosslinkers to improve the compactness of
4
hydrophobic membrane of polyphosphazene PNP vesicles.10 In the pre-formed blank
5
or drug-loaded polymersome solution, HAuCl4 was reduced by NaBH4 to form
6
AuNPs, which were trapped among hydrophobic lamella through the conjugation with
7
the tertiary amine groups of PNP. It should be noted that PNP we synthesized only
8
acted as a stabilizer to AuNPs while NaBH4 was a reductant in that case. Herein,
9
however, we are pleasant to declare that HAuCl4 could be directly transferred to
10
AuNPs after mixed with certain polymersome solution under the optimal conditions,
11
that is, some amphiphilic polyphosphazenes with specific hydrophobic groups could
12
play a role both as a reductant and as a stabilizing agent simultaneously in the process
13
of in situ AuNPs formation after self-assembled into nano-scaled polymersomes. In
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addition, there was almost no aggregation of AuNPs beyond the polymersome
15
membrane, indicating quite strong capability of these polymers to generate and
16
stabilize AuNPs.
17
Thereby, to illustrate the importance of screening hydrophobic groups, we
18
constructed three different types of polyphosphazene vesicles with hydrophilic
19
amino-terminal PEG2000 (NH2-PEG2000) groups and different hydrophobic groups of
20
ethyl
21
4-aminobenzoic acid diethylaminoethyl ester (DEAAB), namely PEP, PDP and
22
PDEP, respectively. A minor but essential difference existed among the three
23
hydrophobic groups. EAB contained a benzene ring but no tertiary amine group, DPA
24
possessed tertiary amine group but no benzene ring, and both a benzene ring and
25
tertiary amine group were present in DEAAB. We also investigated the factors that
26
might affect the reactions between these hydrophobic groups in the polyphosphazenes
27
and AuCl4-. The formation of polymer-AuNP complexes was evidenced by UV-Vis
28
spectroscopy, transmission electron microscope (TEM), and X-ray diffraction (XRD).
29
The mechanism between polymer and AuNPs capped in the hydrophobic membrane
30
of vesicles was determined by fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The
p-aminobenzoate
(EAB),
N,N-diisopropylethylenediamine
(DPA)
and
4
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water-soluble
2
(DOX·HCl) was used as a model drug, and the in vitro drug release was researched.
3
Moreover, the drug loading capability of these three polyphosphazene vesicles was
4
explored, which was a predominant issue for the drug delivery system and made the
5
drug controlled release more significant. With this study, we expected to find some
6
valuable strategies to improve the stability of polymersomes so the payload can be
7
effectively maintained until it reaches the tumor tissues via the enhanced permeability
8
and retention (EPR) effect. Based on this study, we expected to confirm some
9
valuable strategies to induce AuNPs complex vesicles for stability regulation.
10
small-molecule
chemotherapeutics
doxorubicin
hydrochloride
MATERIALS AND METHODS
11
Materials. Hexachlorocyclotriphosphazene (HCCP) (Acros Organics, Belgium)
12
was sublimated at 80-90 °C under a nitrogen atmosphere and ring-opening
13
polymerized at 250 °C to obtain poly(dichlorophosphazene).1,11-12 PEG2000 (Fluka,
14
Steinheim, Germany) was azeotropically dehydrated with dry toluene and
15
amino-terminal modified to NH2-PEG2000 according to our previous work.1 EAB and
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DPA were all purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). DEAAB was
17
obtained from 4-aminobenzoic acid diethylaminoethyl ester hydrochloride (Acros
18
Organics, Belgium) through desalination with trimethylamine (TEA). DOX·HCl was
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kindly supplied from Haikou Manfangyuan Chemical Company (Haikou, China).
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Chloroauric acid hydrate (HAuCl4·4H2O) and all other organic reagents were
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laboratory reagent grade and purchased from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd
22
(Shanghai, China), but again, the moisture in TEA and petroleum were removed by
23
distillation and the water in NH2-PEG2000 was removed by toluene through azeotropic
24
distillation because hexachlorocyclotriphosphazene was water-funk during the
25
nucleophilic replacement process.
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Synthesis and Characterization of Polyphosphazenes. PEP was prepared under
27
nitrogen conditions by a sequential nucleophilic substitution of NH2-PEG2000 and
28
EAB onto a poly(dichlorophosphazene) backbone. Briefly, 1.60 g (0.8 mM)
29
NH2-PEG2000 was dehydrated and dissolved in 30 mL dry toluene with equal molar 5
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dry TEA. Then, the solution was added dropwise into 20 mL toluene solution
2
containing 0.5 g poly(dichlorophosphazene) and stirred overnight at 30 °C. Morrow,
3
to elevate the temperature of the reaction system to 50 °C and an excess of EAB (1.31
4
g, 7.9 mM) in 30 mL dry toluene with equal molar TEA, was added slowly into the
5
mixture. After 24 h stirring, the product was precipitated in cold diethyl ether and
6
dialyzed against purified water for 24 h with frequent water changing. PDP and PDEP
7
were achieved in the same way except for the different feed ratio of the hydrophilic
8
chain NH2-PEG2000 and hydrophobic side groups DPA or DEAAB. For PDP, the
9
ratios were 1.80 g (0.9 mM) NH2-PEG2000 and 1.13 g (7.8 mM) DPA. For PDEP, the
10
reactants mass were 1.25 g (0.6 mM) NH2-PEG2000 and 1.59 g (8.1 mM) DEAAB.
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Copolymer chemical compositions were analyzed by FTIR (NICOLET 6700,
12
Nicolet, USA). 1H NMR (DMX-500, Bruker, Germany) in CDCl3 at 400 MHZ was
13
carried out to back up the copolymers’ composition results by FTIR spectra, and the
14
molar fraction of NH2-PEG2000 and EAB/DPA/DEAAB on each polymer unit was
15
also evaluated by 1H NMR spectra. Furthermore, the molecular weights of PEP, PDP
16
and PDEP and the polydispersity Mw/Mn of the copolymers were GPC (D40, TSK
17
CO., Kyoto, Japan) with N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) as an eluent with 1
18
mL·min-1 flow rate at room temperature, relative to polystyrene standards.
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Preparation of Polyphosphazenes Particles and Morphological Examination.
20
Polyphosphazene nanoparticles were prepared via a dialysis method. Briefly, PEP,
21
PDP and PDEP polymers were separately dissolved in DMF at 95 mg·mL-1. Then,
22
equal volumes of MilliQ water were added slowly with gentle stirring at room
23
temperature. After 5 min, the mixture solutions were transferred into dialysis bags
24
(8-14 kDa molecular weight cut-off (MWCO)) and dialyzed against pure water for 5 h
25
with fresh water changing every hour. The obtained solutions were stored for
26
morphological examination.
27
TEM (JEM-1200EX, Japan) was applied to investigate the morphology of the
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polyphosphazene particles. Each sample was obtained through dipping a
29
carbon-coated copper grid into the particle solution diluted into 5 mg·mL-1 for 30 min
30
and dried at room temperature. 6
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The size and zeta potential of these polyphosphazene nanoparticles were analyzed
2
by DLS (Malvern Nano-S90, UK). The concentrations of these nanoparticle solutions
3
were diluted to 1 mg·mL-1 with distilled water for the measurements. The scattering
4
angle was fixed at 90o, and the detection temperature was maintained at a constant
5
temperature of 25 °C.
6
In-Situ Formulation and Characterizations of AuNPs by PEP, PDP and PDEP.
7
AuNPs were generated by simply mixing an aqueous solution of HAuCl4·4H2O with
8
an aqueous solution of polyphosphazene vesicle and stirring for some time.
9
Polymer-AuNP complex hydrosols were freeze-dried in a lyophilizer (FD-1A-50,
10
Beijing, China). Preparing KBr disks with 2 mg of each sample and collecting spectra
11
using a NICOLET 200SXV Infrared Spectrophotometer (Nicolet, USA) to confirm
12
the formation of AuNPs. Blank KBr disk was used as background spectra. XRD
13
patterns were obtained with a Bruker AXS D8 DISCOVER diffractometer using
14
CuKα (0.1542 nm) radiation. UV-Vis measurements were performed with an
15
ultraviolet spectrophotometer (TU-1800PC, Beijing, China). The size and Zeta
16
potential of the obtained polymer-AuNP complexes were recorded on a Zetasizer
17
Nano ZS (Malvern, UK) equipped with a standard 633 nm laser to investigate the
18
influence of AuNPs formation on the particle sizes and Zeta potentials. Moreover,
19
TEM was carried on a JEOL JEM-1100 (Japan) microscope operating at 80 kV to
20
observe the particle micromorphology. Samples for TEM were prepared by dipping a
21
carbon-coated copper grid into mixture solution (5 mg·mL-1) for 30 min and air
22
drying before measurements. We evaluated the influence of some factors, such as the
23
type of reductant, temperature, reaction time and molar ratio of hydrophobic group in
24
polymer to HAuCl4, on the size and reaction rate of particles generated. The molar
25
ratio of hydrophobic group in polymer to HAuCl4 ranged from 1:4 to 8:1 (gradually
26
reduction of HAuCl4). Different temperatures were considered for the generation of
27
gold nanoparticles, i.e., 20 and 30 °C. During the experiments, we monitored the color
28
change and gold nanoparticle generation as time progressed. In all cases, the reaction
29
mixtures were left at 4 °C for a minimum of one month to observe the gold
30
nanoparticles’ precipitation. 7
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In order to determine the loading content and conversion ratio of AuNP, we also
2
measured the concentration of Au in different polymersome samples at 4:1 molar ratio
3
of the hydrophobic group in polymers to HAuCl4 after dialysis against water to
4
remove the unreacted HAuCl4 by an inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission
5
spectrometer (ICP-AES, SPECTRO ARCOS, Spectro, Germany).
6
Drug
Loaded
Polymer-AuNP
Complexes
Vesicles
Preparation
and
7
Characterizations. On the basis of the above experiments, we screened the desired
8
reductant, temperature and reaction time. Then, we prepared drug-loaded
9
polymer-AuNP complex vesicles at the optimal conditions. The specific steps were
10
similar to the above section, except 100 µL 5 mg·mL-1 DOX·HCl aqueous solution
11
took the place of the water solution, followed by the HAuCl4 liquor addition.
12
The concentration of DOX·HCl in the obtained polymer-AuNP complexes vesicles
13
was determined by high-performance lipid chromatography (HPLC). The vesicles
14
were destroyed by methyl alcohol to eject DOX·HCl from the vesicles’ hydrophilic
15
core. The resulting solutions were analyzed with a Prominence UFLC (Shimadzu
16
Corporation) equipped with a Kromasil 100-5C18 reverse-phase column and a
17
dual-wavelength UV-Vis detector operating at 233 nm wavelength and 1 mL·min-1
18
flow rate. A 49:20:31 mixture (v/v) of pure HPLC-grade methanol, acetonitrile and
19
phosphate buffer solution (containing 25 mM·L-1 Na2HPO4 and 30 mM·L-1 KH2PO4
20
with the pH adjusted to 5.0) was used. DOX·HCl was eluted for 5 min at room
21
temperature. Eight DOX·HCl solutions with known concentrations ranging from 1 to
22
75 µg·mL-1 were prepared to construct a calibration curve. The loading content (LC)
23
and encapsulation efficiency (EE) were determined as:
24
LC (%) = (weight of drug in drug-loaded vesicles / weight of drug-loaded vesicles) × 100%
25
(1)
26
EE (%) = (weight of drug in drug-loaded vesicles / initial weight of drug-loaded vesicles) × 100%
27
(2)
28 29
DLS experiments were conducted to measure the particle sizes of the drug-loaded vesicles, and TEM was carried out to verify their morphology. 8
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In Vitro Drug Release Behaviour. Specifically, 200 µL of drug-loaded vesicles
2
solution was transferred into a sealed dialysis bag (MWCO 8-14 kDa), dipped in 10
3
mL pH 7.4 phosphate buffered solution (PBS), and shaken at 100 rpm at 37 ºC in an
4
incubator. At the predetermined time points, 1 mL release media was withdrawn and
5
replaced by an equal volume of pre-warmed fresh PBS. The concentration of
6
DOX·HCl
7
spectrophotometer at a wavelength of 480 nm. All results were the mean of three test
8
runs. The release behaviors of drug-loaded vesicles in pH 5.5 were also studied
9
according to the above method.
in
the
collected
media
was
determined
using
an
ultraviolet
10
Statistical Analysis. The data are expressed as the means ± standard deviations of
11
the various measurements. The statistical significance of the intergroup differences
12
was analyzed using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and the Duncan post hoc
13
test. Differences with a P value of less than 0.05 were considered statistically
14
significant.
15
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
16
Synthesis and Characterization. PEP, PDP and PDEP were prepared through
17
nucleophilic substitution by hydrophilic NH2-PEG2000 and hydrophobic EAB, DPA
18
and DEAAB, respectively. The detailed synthesis routes were illustrated in Scheme
19
S1. The spectra recorded by FTIR are shown in Figure 1A. The characteristic bands
20
of hydrophilic chain and polyphosphazene backbone were the same in PEP, PDP and
21
PDEP, that is, 1351 and 1021 cm-1 (-N=P- stretching vibration), 950 cm-1 (-N-P-
22
stretching vibration), 2872 cm-1 (-CH2- stretching vibration, NH2-PEG2000), 1467 cm-1
23
(-CH2- deformation vibration, NH2-PEG2000), and 1108 cm-1 (-C-O- stretching
24
vibration, NH2-PEG2000). Additionally, the peak assignments of the hydrophobic side
25
groups on the polyphosphazene backbone are as follows: PEP: 1710 cm-1 (-C=O-
26
stretching vibration, EAB) and 852 cm-1 (p-substituted benzene vibration, EAB).
27
PDP: 1525 and 3322 cm−1 (−NH− stretching vibration, DPA), 2969 cm−1 (−CH3
28
stretching vibration, DPA) and 2884 cm−1 (−CH2− stretching vibration, DPA). PDEP:
9
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852 cm-1 (p-substituted benzene vibration, DEAAB), and 1607 cm-1 (N-H
2
deformation vibration, DEAAB).
3
The common peak attributions of -NH-PEG2000 in these polymers’ 1H NMR spectra
4
(Figure 1B) were set as follows: 3.2 ppm (-NH-CH2-CH2-), 3.3 ppm (-OCH3,), 3.5
5
ppm (-NH-CH2-CH2-) and 3.6 (-O-CH2-CH2-). The differences among the spectra
6
were due to the different hydrophobic chains. PEP: 1.3 ppm (-CH3, EAB), 4.2 ppm
7
(-OCH2-, EAB), and 7.2-7.6 ppm (phenyl, EAB). PDP: 1.1 ppm (-CH3, DPA), 2.4
8
ppm (-CH2-, DPA), and 3.0 ppm (-CH- and –NH-CH2-, DPA). PDEP: 1.3 ppm
9
(-CH3, DEAAB), 2.5 ppm (--CH2-, DEAAB), 4.2 ppm (-OCH2-, DEAAB), and
10
7.2-7.6 ppm (phenyl, DEAAB). The molar ratios of the hydrophilic chain to the
11
hydrophobic chain in PEP, PDP and PDEP were calculated by the peak areas of the
12
chemical shifts at 3.3 and 1.3 ppm, 3.3 and 1.1 ppm, and 3.3 and 1.3 ppm,
13
respectively. Thus, the molar ratios of the hydrophilic chain/hydrophobic group of
14
three polymers were 0.5/1.5, 0.4/1.6 and 0.3/1.7, respectively. The number-averaged
15
molecular weight (Mn) and polydispersity index (PDI) of PEP, PDP and PDEP are
16
displayed in Table 1.
17
10
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Figure 1. Characterization of three different polyphosphazene polymers. (A) FTIR spectra and (B)
2
1
3
Table 1. Characteristics of the amphiphilic polyphosphazenes and their self-assembled vesicles.
H NMR spectra in CDCl3.
polymers
Mn
PDIa
fPEG
size (nm)(PDIb)
PEP
45950
1.89
0.77
94.37±4.50 (0.32)
PDP
22289
1.74
0.74
204.17±3.99 (0.31)
PDEP
53183
1.75
0.57
182.31±4.71 (0.22)
4
a
The polydispersity index of the copolymers’ number-average molecular weight.
5
b
The particle size polydispersity index of polyphosphazene vesicles.
6 7
Self-assemble Behavior of Polyphosphazene Particles. Amphiphilic polymers in
8
DMF solvent assembled gradually into a defined arrangement with the increase in
9
water content during the dialysis process. The configurations of polymers largely
10
depended on the chemical structure of the polymers.13 It was widely reported that the
11
PEG content (fPEG) in the copolymer controlled the architecture of polymers that
12
aggregation-shifted from micelles to vesicles with the decrease in the PEG level.14, 15
13
In our previous work, we prepared a series of amphiphilic polyphosphazenes with
14
various hydrophilic NH2-PEG2000/hydrophobic EAB molar ratios.2 The fPEG of
15
polyphosphazene vesicles was more than 0.5,1, 2 which was higher than that of the
16
amphiphilic diblock copolymer vesicles (0.20-0.42).16 According to the propositions,
17
we designed PEP, PDP and PDEP with comparatively low PEG content on the
18
premise of polymer water solubility. According to the ratio of hydrophilic
19
chain/hydrophobic groups, the fPEG of PEP, PDP and PDEP was calculated as 0.77,
20
0.74 and 0.57, respectively. The size of the aggregations were analyzed by DLS
21
(Table 1). All polymers had the tendency to form stable nanostructures with a narrow
22
size distribution. As shown in Figure 2A-C, the polymers all presented as vesicles in
23
aqueous solution with a hydrophobic polymer membrane and a hydrophilic inner
24
cavity, which further supported the above theory.
25
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Figure 2. TEM images of (A) PEP, (B) PDP, (C) PDEP, (D) PEP-AuNP complex, (E) PDP-AuNP
3
complex and (F) PDEP-AuNP complex with a hydrophobic group in polymer/ HAuCl4 molar ratio
4
of 4:1 after reacting for 24 h; the inset shows the magnified image of the polymers and
5
polymer-AuNP complexes. All scale bars are 0.2 µm.
6 7
Influence of Type of Hydrophobic Groups in Polymers. In addition to PEP,
8
there is a considerable quantity of tertiary amino groups in PDP and PDEP with
9
different chemical surroundings. We mixed three polyphosphazene vesicle solutions
10
with a HAuCl4 aqueous solution at a hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar
11
ratio of 4:1 and stirred the mixture for at least 24 h at 30 °C. We evaluated the AuNP
12
generation through the solutions’ color change and UV-Vis spectra. As shown in
13
Figure 3A, no color change was observed in the PEP-HAuCl4 mixture. On the
14
contrary, the PDP and PDEP mixture solutions exhibited a color change from yellow
15
to wine red. These phenomena indicated that the AuNPs were generated in-situ
16
through the reduction by PDP and PDEP, with the exception of PEP.17
17
The UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy studies shown in Figure 3B added credence
18
to these results. The inset displayed the magnified image range from 460 to 610 nm.
19
PDP-AuNP and PDEP-AuNP complex vesicle solutions presented a maximum
20
absorption at 535 nm and 525 nm, respectively, due to the surface plasmon resonance
21
(SPR) absorption of the AuNPs. According to the interpretation proposed by Mie,18
22
the SPR of the AuNPs was attributed to the free electrons’ collective oscillation on the 12
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surfaces of the AuNPs when exposed to light with a wavelength much larger than the
2
particles’ size. The SPR peak shift hinged on the size of the AuNPs to a great extent
3
and led to the gold hydrosol solution color change.19 Compared to the common SPR
4
peak shift at approximately 520 nm for the AuNPs, our results expressed a slight red
5
shift, and we proposed this phenomenon to account for the complexes generated
6
between the polymer and the AuNPs.
7 8
Figure 3. The characteristics of AuNP generation after mixing with different polyphosphazene
9
polymers at 30 °C. (A) The color change of these mixtures at 24 h, (B) the UV-Vis spectra of
10
polymers and polymer-AuNP complexes, (C, D) the UV-Vis spectra of PDP/PDEP-AuNP
11
complexes with different stirring time with hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio
12
setting at 4:1 and (E, F) the UV-Vis spectra of PDP/PDEP-AuNP complexes with different
13
hydrophobic group in polymer/ HAuCl4 molar ratios. The inset shows the magnified image of the
14
polymer-AuNP complexes.
15 16
Then, XRD was employed to characterize the crystal texture of the AuNPs in
17
PDP-AuNP and PDEP-AuNP complexes. As shown in Figure S1, the four peaks that
18
appeared at 38.2, 44.4, 64.6 and 77.5° corresponded to the (111), (200), (220) and 13
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1
(311) diffraction peaks of the gold face-center cubic (fcc), respectively, thus
2
demonstrating the pure crystalline nature of AuNPs reduced by PDP and PDEP.20
3
Furthermore, we quantitatively analyzed the AuNP concentration in each
4
complexes vesicles at a hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio of 4:1
5
after dialysis against water to remove the unreacted HAuCl4 via ICP-AES. According
6
to the results, the conversions of the HAuCl4 to the AuNP for two amino groups
7
contained PDP and PEDP vesicles were 88.10% and 92.78%. And on the basis of the
8
amount of polymer adding, their loading content of Au were 5.22% and 6.89%,
9
respectively. In contrast, the AuNP loading content and conversion ratio of
10
PEP-AuNP complex vesicles was only 0.22% and 3.17%, respectively. In other words,
11
the vast majority of HAuCl4 added were unreacted with PEP, implying PEP almost
12
lacked the ability to reduce HAuCl4 due to the absence of tertiary amine groups.
13
The morphologies of the polymer-AuNP complexes were observed by TEM
14
(Figure 2D-F). And the actual mean particle sizes determined by DLS were 92.23 nm,
15
226.8 nm, 205.7 nm for PEP-AuNP, PDP-AuNP and PDEP-AuNP complex vesicles,
16
respectively. In a previous study by Richardson et al.,21 low molecular weight
17
compounds containing tertiary amino groups reacted promptly to generate AuNPs
18
within one hour, but aggregation occurred spontaneously. However, we successfully
19
avoided this phenomenon by substituting high molecular weight grafted
20
polyphosphazenes for low molecular weight compounds. From Figure 2E and F, the
21
coordination between the tertiary amino groups and generated AuNPs22-24 seemed to
22
effectively prevent the new-born AuNPs from aggregating and result in the
23
homogeneous distribution of AuNPs in the hydrophobic membranes of vesicles,
24
probably because of the considerable sequestration of tertiary amines to AuNPs and
25
the intertwined nature of the branched chains.25 When comparing Figure 2B and E or
26
Figure 2C and F, it is obvious that the introduction of the AuNPs into vesicles
27
thickened the hydrophobic membrane. This feature would be beneficial to the
28
compact nature of the vesicle membrane. However, Figure 2D illustrated the different
29
situation of PEP-AuNP vesicles that many irregular dark particles were scattered
30
outside the vesicles. Since we prepared the TEM samples without removing the 14
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unreacted HAuCl4 and the AuNP conversion ratio was quite low of only 0.22% as
2
discussed above, we speculated that these irregular dark particles were unreacted
3
HAuCl4 due to poor reactivity of PEP with HAuCl4.
4
Influence of Reaction Time and Temperature. As the above text suggested, PEP
5
did not possess the reduction capacity to HAuCl4; thus, the following research objects
6
were focused on PDP and PDEP vesicles. It has long been known that temperature is
7
a significant issue for chemical reactions.26, 27 Experiments were carried out at 20 and
8
30 ºC to seek the optimal temperature for the reaction at a constant copolymer
9
concentration of 2 mM and a hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio
10
setting of 4:1. As shown in Figure S2A, after stirring for 24 h at 20 ºC, no color
11
changes were observed in the PDP and PDEP vesicles when mixing with the HAuCl4
12
aqueous solution. Conversely, AuNPs were achieved upon elevating the reaction
13
temperature to 30 ºC. The kinetics of the AuNP formation could explain the reason in
14
the framework of Marcus electron transfer theory.28-30 The increased temperature
15
provided more contacts between electron donors and receptors and cut down the free
16
energy of the reaction, leading to the spontaneous HAuCl4 reduction reaction.
17
A suite of studies concerning reaction time were supervised at 0.083, 0.17, 0.5, 1, 2,
18
4, 24 and 48 h at 30 ºC. The solution color and UV-Vis spectra are given in Figure
19
S2B and Figure 3C and D, respectively. PDP had a slightly higher reaction rate than
20
PDEP did, with color changes at 0.5 and 1 h, respectively, and reduced HAuCl4
21
completely without a significant color change after 4 h, which was shorter than found
22
in the previous work.21,
23
different reactivity occurred due to the combination of steric hindrance and electron
24
density of tertiary amino groups. The -C=O- group in PDEP acted as an electron
25
withdrawing role, decreasing the electron density of lone pair electrons on the tertiary
26
amino group. Furthermore, the ethyl group had a stronger steric effect than the methyl
27
group, thus lowering the reaction rate. In summary, PDEP displayed a lower reactivity
28
than PDP did, which was subjected to stronger steric hindrance and lower electron
29
density. Despite all this, the reactivity of PDEP was still considerable.
31
UV-Vis patterns revealed the same consequence. The
15
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Influence of Hydrophobic Group in Polymer/HAuCl4 Molar Ratio. High
2
hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratios from several to thousands were
3
necessary to guarantee the reaction completeness and the AuNP stability.21,
4
However, in our work, AuNPs formed even though the hydrophobic group in
5
polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio was set to 0.25 (Figure 3E and F), which was probably
6
due to the unique structure of the polyphosphazenes. In the chain of
7
polyphosphazenes, each repeat unit contained nearly 2 tertiary amino groups, which
8
explained the outstanding reducing effect with a lower amount of reductant than that
9
used in other studies. We designed six molar ratios, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4 and 8, and found
10
that as the molar ratio decreased, the complex solutions were changed from pale
11
yellow to burgundy after 24 h (Figure S2C). Furthermore, we measured the size and
12
took TEM images of polymer-AuNP vesicles at various hydrophobic group in
13
polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratios (supporting information, Table S1 and Figure S3). The
14
results indicated that the particle sizes and the membrane thickness gradually
15
increased with the decrease of hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio.
16
Based on the previous literatures,33-36 the amount of reductant affected the nucleation
17
rate of gold nanoparticles so that the size of AuNP increased as the reducant amount
18
decreased.
31, 32
19
Mechanism of AuNPs Generation. The remaining question was how gold cations
20
were reduced by PDP and PDEP. We assumed that tertiary amino groups in PDP and
21
PDEP took on the responsibility to reduce the gold ions, accompanied by
22
synchronously partially oxidized, which was supported by many previous studies. 37-42
23
They contended that the lone pair electron on the nitrogen of the unprotonated tertiary
24
amino groups was responsible for the effective reducing ability. The reducing process
25
is described by the following equation. 41, 42
26
2R-CH2-NR2 + AuCl4- → 2R-CH=N+R2 + Au0 + 2H + + 4Cl-
(3)
27
We verified this hypothesis by comparing the FTIR spectrograms of polymer and
28
polymer-AuNP complex (Figure 4). The expected concurrent peaks of new bands
29
related to the formation of imine appeared: -C=N- stretching vibration at
30
approximately 1650 cm-1 and 1645 cm-1 were observed in the PDP-AuNP and 16
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PDEP-AuNP complexes, respectively. Therefore, we can conclude that the tertiary
2
amino group played an active role in the reduction of HAuCl4.
3
4 5
Figure 4. The FTIR spectra of polymers and polymer-AuNP complexes. (A) PDP and PDP-AuNP
6
complex and (B) PDEP and PDEP-AuNP complex.
7 8
Drug Loading Behaviour. Then we encapsulated DOX·HCl into polyphosphazene
9
vesicles via a dialysis method. Surprising there was almost no DOX·HCl loaded into
10
PDP (loading content 0.23±0.03 %, encapsulation efficiency 2.2±0.06 %). Inversely,
11
PEP and PDEP displayed outstanding DOX·HCl loading capacity, with 4.87±0.12%
12
loading content, 97.31±2.18% encapsulation efficiency and 4.71±0.17% loading
13
content, and 93.74±4.91% encapsulation efficiency, respectively. And the in situ
14
reducing HAuCl4 by tertiary amino groups in PDEP had little effect on the drug
15
loading. For instance, when the hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio
16
was 4:1, the drug loading content and encapsulation efficiency of PDEP-AuNP
17
complex system were 4.63±0.22% and 91.66±5.31%, respectively. The outstanding
18
drug-loading capacity was mainly due to two aspects. One was because of the strong
19
mutual attraction between the benzene ring in EAB or DEAAB and the anthracene
20
ring in DOX·HCl as we reported before.2 Therefore, the absence of a benzene ring in
21
DPA caused the loss of this strong action, following by poor drug encapsulation of 17
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1
PDP vesicle. On the other hand it was probably attributed to electrostatic
2
incorporation. Namely, PDP possessed a strong positive charge with 21.45 mV zeta
3
potential and DOX·HCl was weakly electropositive43 so that the charge repulsion
4
between PDP and DOX·HCl inhibited the drug loading during the dialysis process.
5
Conversely, the zeta potentials of PEP and PDEP were -12.31 mV and -14.94 mV,
6
respectively, which facilitated the adsorption of DOX·HCl. Otherwise, adding
7
positively charged HAuCl4 partially decreased the potential of PDEP, but the whole
8
system was electronegative. Therefore, PEP, PDEP and PDEP-AuNP complex all
9
demonstrated better DOX·HCl loading capacity than did PDP and PDP-AuNP
10
complex. Satisfactory loading capability is an obligatory factor to construct a
11
nano-scaled drug delivery system; otherwise, there would be no sense in discussing
12
vesicle stability for controlled drug release. The particle sizes of the drug-loaded
13
polymer-AuNPs complexes were measured by DLS and were slightly enlarged
14
compared with blank polymer-AuNPs complexes (Table S2). TEM images indicated
15
the center cavity turned dark of PEP or PDP vesicles after DOX·HCl loaded (Figure
16
S4).
17
In Vitro Drug Release. On the basis of the above results, PDP exhibited a quite
18
poor loading content, which restricted its application for DOX·HCl delivery, although
19
its vesicle had enough dense shells after the AuNPs complexed. Thus, in this section,
20
we discuss the release behavior of the DOX·HCl-loaded PEP system (named PEP-D)
21
and DOX·HCl-loaded PDEP system (named PDEP-D). As shown in Figure 5A, the
22
burst drug release from PEP-D and PDEP-D was so serious that the accumulative
23
drug release ratios in the first 4 h were 47.21% and 44.77%, respectively. Since PEP
24
cannot induce AuNP formation, adding HAuCl4 into PEP vesicle system failed to
25
inhibit DOX·HCl burst release. However, it was clear that in situ reducing HAuCl4
26
into AuNPs by tertiary amino group of PDEP significantly alleviated the DOX·HCl
27
burst release, apart from the molar ratio setting at 8 (Figure 5B). The extent of the
28
slowdown in drug release increased with the decrease of tertiary amino group/HAuCl4
29
molar ratio. The most likely reason could be that the large molar ratio of hydrophobic
30
group in polymer to HAuCl4 resulted in the fast generation of Au nuclei, so the size of 18
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resultant AuNPs was relatively small. Therefore, the density of the vesicles’
2
membrane was relatively weak, which led to the fast drug release. Further, we
3
investigated the release profiles of PDEP-D and DOX·HCl-loaded PDEP-AuNP
4
complex system (named PEDP-AuNP-D) in different pH release media (Figure 5A).
5
Compared with the result obtained for pH 7.4 PBS, the lower pH obviously promoted
6
the drug release from PDEP-D and PEDP-AuNP-D. According to our previous
7
work,10 the zeta potential of PDEP vesicles in pH 7.4 and 5.5 were -14.9 mV and 2.0
8
mV, respectively, and the AuNP loading had no effect on their pH sensitivity. And the
9
corresponding sizes were 182.3 nm and 208.3 nm severally. The reason for this
10
phenomenon might be to the protonation of the tertiary amino groups in acidic
11
circumstances, leading to the decrease of the hydrophobicity of DEAAB in the PDEP,
12
which made the vesicles looser but maintained the core-shell structure, accompanied
13
by holes generated on the surface.1 Therefore, PDEP-AuNP-D at the optimal
14
hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio achieved considerable inhibition
15
of drug leakage at pH7.4 and fast drug release responsive to lower pH.
16
17 18
Figure 5. The release profile of drug-loaded polymer systems. (A) PEP-D and PDEP-D in pH 7.4
19
PBS, PDEP-D and PDEP-AuNP-D (hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio set at
20
4:1) in pH 5.5, (B) PDEP-AuNP-D with various hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4
21
molar ratio in pH 7.4 PBS.
22 23
24
In summary, the presence of benzene rings and tertiary amino groups in PDEP
25
rendered the high DOX·HCl encapsulation and efficient in situ AuNP generation as
CONCLUSIONS
19
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1
both a reductant and a stabilizer to improve the formulation stability under normal
2
physiological condition (pH7.4). Moreover, the protonation of the tertiary amine in
3
DEAAB of PEDP might contribute to the fast intracellular drug release. All these
4
properties of PDEP-AuNP-D would be expected to exert synergistic and positive
5
effect on final drug action.
6
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
7
Supporting Information
8
The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications
9
website.
10
Schematic illustration of the synthesis of polymers (Scheme S1)
11
The XRD results of PDP/PDEP-AuNP complexes (Figure S1)
12
The color change of PDP/PDEP and HAuCl4 mixture solutions at different
13
temperature, time and hydrophobic group in polymer/ HAuCl4 molar ratios (Figure
14
S2)
15
The TEM images of PDEP-AuNP complex vesicles at various hydrophobic group
16
in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratios. (A) 0.25, (B) 0.5, (C) 1, (D) 2, (E) 4 and (F) 8
17
(Figure S3) The TEM images of (A) PEP-D, (B) PDEP-D and (C) PDEP-AuNP-D with
18 19
hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratio setting at 4:1 (Figure S4) The particle size of PDP-AuNP and PDEP-AuNP complexes vesicles with various
20 21
hydrophobic group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratios (Table S1) The particle size (nm) of PEP-D, PDEP-D and PDEP-AuNP-D with hydrophobic
22 23
group in polymer/HAuCl4 molar ratios setting at 4:1 (Table S2)
24
AUTHOR INFORMATION
25
Corresponding Author
26
*E-mail:
[email protected] 27
Notes
28
The authors declare that there are no competing financial interests.
29
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
20
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This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China
2
(81673384).
3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42
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