| Literature DB >> 31068982 |
Kouichi Shiraishi1, Masayuki Yokoyama1.
Abstract
Polymeric-micelle carrier systems have emerged as a novel drug-carrier system and have been actively studied for anticancer drug targeting. In contrast, toxicological and immunological concerns related to not only polymeric-micelle carrier systems, but also other nanocarrier systems, have received little attention owing to researchers' focus on therapeutic effects. However, in recent clinical contexts, biopharmaceuticals' effects on immune responses have come to light, requiring that researchers substantively explore the potential negative side effects of nanocarrier systems and of therapeutic proteins in order to develop nanocarrier systems suitable for clinical use. The present review describes current insights into both toxicological and immunological issues regarding polymeric-micelle carrier systems. The review focuses on immunogenicity issues of polymeric-micelle carrier systems possessing poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG). We conclude that PEG-related immunogenicity is deeply related to characteristics of a counterpart block of PEG-conjugates, and we propose future directions for addressing this unresolved issue.Entities:
Keywords: 101 Self-assembly / Self-organized materials; 30 Bio-inspired and biomedical materials; Polymeric-micelle carrier systems; anti-PEG IgM; immunogenicity; poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG); toxicity
Year: 2019 PMID: 31068982 PMCID: PMC6493319 DOI: 10.1080/14686996.2019.1590126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1.(a) A detail structure of polymeric micelle. (b) A dense PEG brush structure on polymeric micelle surface suppresses adsorption of serum proteins.
Figure 2.The first PEG-liposome elicited anti-PEG IgM, and the second PEG-liposome exhibited ABC phenomenon.
Summary of characteristic differences between PEG-liposomes and PEG-PBLA micelles.
| 1st injection | Size/nm | Anti-PEG IgM induction | 2nd injection | ABC phenomenon | PEG nmol/mouse | Particles number | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEG-liposomes | 130 | Yes | PEG-liposomes | Yes | 1.0 × 10−7 | 5.1 | 2.1 × 1011 |
| PEG-PBLA micelles | No | ||||||
| PEG-PBLA micelles | 90 | Yes | PEG-liposomes | Yes | 1.4 × 10−7 | 4.5 | 1.6 × 1012 |
| PEG-PBLA micelles | No |
* We estimated Kd values of anti-PEG IgM to PEGylated NPs by means of ELISA. Kd values obtained a concentration > 20μg/mL.
Figure 3.PEG-PBLA micelles induced anti-PEG IgM responses in mice, however, PEG-PBLA micelles exhibited no ABC phenomenon.
Figure 4.Schematic images of equilibrium between an anti-PEG IgM-bound complex and (a) free PEG (MeO-PEG-PH) and (b) PEG-conjugate (MeO-PEG-conjugate). Binding affinity of MeO-PEG conjugate is a counterpart block of PEG-conjugates’ hydrophobicity-dependent.
Figure 5.PEG-conjugate possessing P(Asp) units between a PEG and a hydrophobic block suppressed bindings of anti-PEG IgM in a P(Asp) ‘chain length’-dependent manner.