Issue 39, 2023

Engineering endosomolytic nanocarriers of diverse morphologies using confined impingement jet mixing

Abstract

The clinical translation of many biomolecular therapeutics has been hindered by undesirable pharmacokinetic (PK) properties, inadequate membrane permeability, poor endosomal escape and cytosolic delivery, and/or susceptibility to degradation. Overcoming these challenges merits the development of nanoscale drug carriers (nanocarriers) to improve the delivery of therapeutic cargo. Herein, we implement a flash nanoprecipitation (FNP) approach to produce nanocarriers of diverse vesicular morphologies by using various molecular weight PEG-bl-DEAEMA-co-BMA (PEG-DB) polymers. We demonstrated that FNP can produce uniform (PDI < 0.1) particles after 5 impingements, and that by varying the copolymer hydrophilic mass fraction, FNP enables access to a diverse variety of nanoarchitectures including micelles, unilamellar vesicles (polymersomes), and multi-compartment vesicles (MCVs). We synthesized a library of 2 kDa PEG block copolymers, with DEAEMA-co-BMA second block molecular weights of 3, 6, 12, 15, 20, and 30 kDa. All formulations were both pH responsive, endosomolytic, and capable of loading and cytosolically delivering small negatively charged molecules – albeit to different degrees. Using a B16.F10 melanoma model, we showcased the therapeutic potential of a lead FNP formulated PEG-DB nanocarrier, encapsulating the cyclic dinucleotide (CDN) cGAMP to activate the stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway in a therapeutically relevant context. Collectively, these data demonstrate that an FNP process can be used to formulate pH-responsive nanocarriers of diverse morphologies using a PEG-DB polymer system. As FNP is an industrially scalable process, these data address the critical translational challenge of producing PEG-DB nanoparticles at scale. Furthermore, the diverse morphologies produced may specialize in the delivery of distinct biomolecular cargos for other therapeutic applications, implicating the therapeutic potential of this platform in an array of disease applications.

Graphical abstract: Engineering endosomolytic nanocarriers of diverse morphologies using confined impingement jet mixing

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Jun 2023
Accepted
18 Sep 2023
First published
19 Sep 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale, 2023,15, 16016-16029

Engineering endosomolytic nanocarriers of diverse morphologies using confined impingement jet mixing

H. M. Pagendarm, P. T. Stone, B. R. Kimmel, J. J. Baljon, M. H. Aziz, L. E. Pastora, L. Hubert, E. W. Roth, S. Almunif, E. A. Scott and J. T. Wilson, Nanoscale, 2023, 15, 16016 DOI: 10.1039/D3NR02874G

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