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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(41): 45728-45743, 2020 Oct 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32960036

RESUMO

Hierarchical assembly of building blocks via competing, orthogonal interactions is a hallmark of many of nature's composite materials that do not require highly specific ligand-receptor interactions. To mimic this assembly mechanism requires the development of building blocks capable of tunable interactions. In the present work, we explored the interplay between repulsive (steric and electrostatic) and attractive hydrophobic forces. The designed building blocks allow hydrophobic forces to effectively act at controlled, large distances, to create and tune the assembly of membrane-based building blocks under dilute conditions, and to affect their interactions with cellular membranes via physical cross-bridges. Specifically, we employed double-end-anchored poly(ethylene glycol)s (DEA-PEGs)-hydrophilic PEG tethers with hydrophobic tails on both ends. Using differential-interference-contrast optical microscopy, synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and cryogenic electron microscopy, we investigated the ability of DEA-PEGs to mediate assembly in the dilute regime on multiple length scales and on practical time scales. The PEG length, anchor hydrophobicity, and molar fraction of DEA-PEG molecules within a membrane strongly affect the assembly properties. Additional tuning of the intermembrane interactions can be achieved by adding repulsive interactions via PEG-lipids (steric) or cationic lipids to the DEA-PEG-mediated attractions. While the optical and electron microscopy imaging methods provided qualitative evidence of the ability of DEA-PEGs to assemble liposomes, the SAXS measurements and quantitative line-shape analysis in dilute preparations demonstrated that the ensemble average of loosely organized liposomal assemblies maintains DEA-PEG concentration-dependent tethering on defined nanometer length scales. For cationic liposome-DNA nanoparticles (CL-DNA NPs), aggregation induced by DEA-PEGs decreased internalization of NPs by cells, but tuning the DEA-PEG-induced attractions by adding repulsive steric interactions via PEG-lipids limited aggregation and increased NP uptake. Furthermore, confocal microscopy imaging together with colocalization studies with Rab11 and LysoTracker as markers of intracellular pathways showed that modifying CL-DNA NPs with DEA-PEGs alters their interactions with the plasma and endosomal membranes.


Assuntos
Polímeros/química , DNA/química , Humanos , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Lipossomos/química , Microscopia Confocal , Nanopartículas/química , Células PC-3 , Tamanho da Partícula , Propriedades de Superfície , Células Tumorais Cultivadas
2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 10(50): 44152-44162, 2018 Dec 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30461259

RESUMO

Complex materials often achieve their remarkable functional properties by hierarchical assembly of building blocks via competing and/or synergistic interactions. Here, we describe the properties of new double-end-anchored poly(ethylene glycol)s (DEA-PEGs)-macromolecules designed to impart hydrophobically mediated tethering attractions between charged lipid membranes. We synthesized DEA-PEGs (MW 2000 (2K) and 4.6K) with two double-tail (symmetric) or a double-tail and a single-tail (asymmetric) hydrophobic end anchors and characterized their equilibrium and kinetic properties using small-angle X-ray scattering. Control multilayer membranes without and with PEG lipid (i.e., single-end-anchored PEG) swelled continuously, with the interlayer spacing increasing between 30 and 90 wt % water content due to electrostatic as well as, in the case of PEG lipid, steric repulsion. In contrast, interlayer spacings in lamellar membrane hydrogels containing DEA-PEGs expanded over a limited water dilution range and reached a "locked" state, which displayed a near constant membrane wall-to-wall spacing (δw) with further increases in water content. Remarkably, the locked state displays a simple relation to the PEG radius of gyration δw ≈ 1.6 RG for both 2K and 4.6K PEG. Nevertheless, δw being considerably less than the physical size of PEG (2(5/3)1/2 RG) is highly unexpected and implies that, compared to free PEG, anchoring of the PEG tether at both ends leads to a considerable distortion of the PEG conformation confined between layers. Significantly, the lamellar hydrogel may be designed to reversibly transition from a locked to an unlocked (membrane unbinding) state by variations in the DEA-PEG concentration, controlling the strength of the interlayer attractions due to bridging conformations. The findings with DEA-PEGs have broad implications for hydrophobic-mediated assembly of lipid- or surfactant-coated building blocks with distinct shape and size, at predictable spacing, in aqueous environments.

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