| Literature DB >> 30305165 |
Evelyne M Houang1, Yuk Y Sham1,2,3, Frank S Bates4, Joseph M Metzger5.
Abstract
The scientific premise, design, and structure-function analysis of chemical-based muscle membrane stabilizing block copolymers are reviewed here for applications in striated muscle membrane injury. Synthetic block copolymers have a rich history and wide array of applications from industry to biology. Potential for discovery is enabled by a large chemical space for block copolymers, including modifications in block copolymer mass, composition, and molecular architecture. Collectively, this presents an impressive chemical landscape to leverage distinct structure-function outcomes. Of particular relevance to biology and medicine, stabilization of damaged phospholipid membranes using amphiphilic block copolymers, classified as poloxamers or pluronics, has been the subject of increasing scientific inquiry. This review focuses on implementing block copolymers to protect fragile muscle membranes against mechanical stress. The review highlights interventions in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a fatal disease of progressive muscle deterioration owing to marked instability of the striated muscle membrane. Biophysical and chemical engineering advances are presented that delineate and expand upon current understanding of copolymer-lipid membrane interactions and the mechanism of stabilization. The studies presented here serve to underscore the utility of copolymer discovery leading toward the therapeutic application of block copolymers in Duchenne muscular dystrophy and potentially other biomedical applications in which membrane integrity is compromised.Entities:
Keywords: Block copolymers; Duchenne muscular dystrophy; Membrane stabilization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30305165 PMCID: PMC6180502 DOI: 10.1186/s13395-018-0177-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Skelet Muscle ISSN: 2044-5040 Impact factor: 4.912
Fig. 1Copolymer-based muscle membrane stabilization of dystrophic muscle. a Representation of intact muscle membrane with dystrophin anchoring the DGC to the actin cytoskeleton. b Membrane instability caused by the lack of dystrophin leads to pathological increases in intracellular Ca2+ concentration. c Copolymer stabilization of the damaged membrane via insertion of its hydrophobic PPO block (red) prevents entry of extracellular Ca2+ into the cell
Fig. 2Schematic representation of a triblock and diblock copolymers chemical structures. Chemical structures and representations of the triblock copolymer P188 (PEO75–PPO30–PEO75) and diblocks of P188 (PEO75–PPO15) with differing end groups (–H and –C(CH3)3) where a and b represent the number of repeating PEO and PPO group respectively
Chemical properties of representative synthetic block copolymers
| Architecture | Polymer | PEOa | PPOa | End groupb | Massc | PEO%d |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Triblock copolymer/P188e | PEO75PPO30PEO75 | 150 | 30 | – | 8400 | 80 |
| Triblock copolymer/P338e | PEO140PPO44PEO140 | 280 | 44 | – | 8400 | 84 |
| Triblock copolymer/P331e | PEO7PPO54PEO7 | 14 | 54 | – | 3700 | 26 |
| Diblock copolymer | ||||||
| PEO75PPO15 − H | 75 | 15 | −H | 4200 | 80 | |
| PEO75PPO15 − C4 | 75 | 15 | −C(CH3)3 | 4430 | 77 | |
| Homopolymer | PEO198 | 198 | 0 | – | 8700f | 100 |
aTotal number of EO or PO monomer units
bChemical end group at terminal PO
cAverage molecular weight in g/mol by 1H NMR end-group analysis
dPEO weight percent to total molecular weight
eManufacturer BASF
fNumber average molecular weight
Summary of studies using block copolymers as a treatment in DMD models in vivo
| Copolymer | Pathophysiology | DMD model | Treatment time | Dosage | Delivery route | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P188 | Cardiomyopathy |
| Pre-treatment (30 min) | 460 mg/kg | i.v. | P188 significantly improved cardiac hemodynamic response and animal survival during cardiac stress testing | Yasuda et al. (2005) [ |
| P188 | Skeletal muscle |
| Pre-treatment (30 min) | 600–1800 mg/kg | i.p. | No significant difference in % EBD penetration in rectus femoris muscle fibers in P188 treated | Quinlan et al. (2006) [ |
| P188 | Cardiomyopathy |
| 8 weeks | 60 mg/kg/hr | i.v. | Chronic P188 treatment normalized serum cTnI levels, blocked increases in heart failure marker BNP, significantly decreased cardiac fibrosis, and prevented dilated cardiomyopathy. Cardiac hemodynamic function in response to dobutamine stress was significantly improved compared to saline treatment. Serum CK levels were not affected. | Townsend et al. (2010) [ |
| P188 | Cardiomyopathy |
| 2–4 weeks | 460 mg/kg | i.p. | P188 treatment prevented a decrease in cardiac function in response to isoproterenol stress testing. Treated mice did not show significant differences in cardiac fibrosis but had increase in EBD positive fibers, these hearts showed increased systolic function compared to untreated hearts. | Spurney et al. (2010) [ |
| P188 | Skeletal muscle |
| Pre-treatment 2-week daily | 30 mg/kg, 460 mg/kg | i.p. | Single dose P188 treatment induced an increase in specific force and decreased the number of IgG positive fibers in both non-stressed and stressed muscles. P188 treatment improved the histological appearance in TA muscles under some conditions. 2-week P188 did not affect TA force. During lengthening contraction injury, it was reported that in a subset of contractions the P188 treatment group had slightly but statistically significant lower force than saline control. | Terry et al. (2014) [ |
| P188, P338 | Skeletal muscle |
| Pre-treatment (0.5–3 h) | 60–460 mg/kg | i.p., i.v., s.c., i.m. | Subcutaneous but not intravenous nor intraperitoneal injection of P188 significantly decreased the force loss during and after lengthening contractions of hindlimb | Houang et al.(2015) [ |
| P188 | Respiratory |
| Q.D., 22 weeks | 3 mg/kg | s.c. | Chronic delivery of P188 had significant positive effects on respiratory function parameters and improved diaphragm histological parameters and caused improvement in cardiac hemodynamics of treated | Markham et al. (2015) [ |
| Cardiomyopathy |
| Q.D., 8 weeks | 1 mg/kg | s.c. | P188 treatment slowed the loss of respiratory function and improved diaphragm histological parameters in double knockout mice | ||
| diP188 diP188-CH3 diP188-(CH3)3 | Skeletal muscle |
| Pre-treatment (0.5–3 h) | 1000 mg/kg | i.p. | A diblock copolymer architecture confers membrane stabilization. The addition of a single hydrophobic tert-butoxy end-group to the PPO core significantly enhanced membrane protection against lengthening contractions. The less hydrophobic methoxy and hydrophilic hydroxyl end groups did not confer membrane protection in vivo. | Houang et al.(2017) [ |
i.v., intravenous; i.p., intraperitoneal; s.c., subcutaneous; i.m., intramuscular; EBD, Evans blue dye; GRMD, golden retriever muscular dystrophy; cTnI, cardiac troponin I; BNP, brain natriuretic peptide; CK, creatine kinase; TA, tibialis anterior; Q.D., daily; diP188, diblock P188
Fig. 3Model of copolymer-based membrane stabilization. a In DMD, susceptibility to sarcolemmal damage from lengthening muscle contraction renders the muscle cell membrane leaky to extracellular Ca2+ (pink circles). Subsequent intracellular Ca2+ overload leads to activation of pathological cellular pathways. Further membrane damage overloads the repair capacity of endogenous cell membrane repair mechanisms and ultimately leads to cell death. b Copolymer insertion driven by hydrophobic interactions (red PPO block of the copolymer with the hydrophobic part of the membrane that is now exposed due to instability). Membrane stabilization prevents pathological Ca2+ entry into the cell and prevents activation of cellular death pathways. c While the copolymer stabilizes the membrane and prevents further damage, intrinsic cell membrane repair mechanisms can repair lesions at damaged sites [215]. d Once the membrane integrity is restored, the copolymer membrane stabilizer is “squeezed out” of the membrane. Here, the membrane is resealed, its lipid packing density is restored, and its hydrophobic portion is now enclosed [159, 216]
Fig. 4Schematic representation of structure-function of copolymer-membrane interaction. Triblock copolymer membrane stabilization occurs via insertion of the hydrophobic PPO core block (red) and balanced by flanking of the two hydrophilic PEO blocks (blue) that are required to prevent complete translocation across the membrane. Without a second flanking PEO chain, diblock copolymers can also insert into the membrane, but insertion is at least in part dictated by the PPO end group. Here, the more hydrophobic end group, such as –C(CH3)3 (†), driving insertion and anchoring and the more hydrophilic end groups, such as –OH, retained at the solvent-polar head group interface. Variation in PEO (blue) and PPO (red) block lengths alters the hydrophobic/hydrophilic balance that is required for optimal membrane insertion and stabilization. Too high a PPO/PEO ratio and large size PPO group drives the copolymer deeper into the membrane and further exacerbates damage to the membrane