Issue 9, 2015

Dendritic polyglycerol sulfate as a novel platform for paclitaxel delivery: pitfalls of ester linkage

Abstract

In this study, dendritic polyglycerol sulfate (dPGS) is evaluated as a delivery platform for the anticancer, tubulin-binding drug paclitaxel (PTX). The conjugation of PTX to dPGS is conducted via a labile ester linkage. A non-sulfated dendritic polyglycerol (dPG) is used as a control, and the labeling with an indocarbocyanine dye (ICC) renders multifunctional conjugates that can be monitored by fluorescence microscopy. The conjugates are characterized by 1H NMR, UV-vis measurements, and RP-HPLC. In vitro cytotoxicity of PTX and dendritic conjugates is evaluated using A549 and A431 cell lines, showing a reduced cytotoxic efficacy of the conjugates compared to PTX. The study of uptake kinetics reveals a linear, non saturable uptake in tumor cells for dPGS-PTX-ICC, while dPG-PTX-ICC is hardly taken up. Despite the marginal uptake of dPG-PTX-ICC, it prompts tubulin polymerization to a comparable extent as PTX. These observations suggest a fast ester hydrolysis and premature drug release, as confirmed by HPLC measurements in the presence of plasma enzymes.

Graphical abstract: Dendritic polyglycerol sulfate as a novel platform for paclitaxel delivery: pitfalls of ester linkage

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Aug 2014
Accepted
03 Dec 2014
First published
17 Dec 2014
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nanoscale, 2015,7, 3923-3932

Author version available

Dendritic polyglycerol sulfate as a novel platform for paclitaxel delivery: pitfalls of ester linkage

A. Sousa-Herves, P. Würfel, N. Wegner, J. Khandare, K. Licha, R. Haag, P. Welker and M. Calderón, Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 3923 DOI: 10.1039/C4NR04428B

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