| Literature DB >> 34201403 |
Roberto Grosso1, M-Violante de-Paz1.
Abstract
Thiomers (or thiolated polymers) have broken through as avant-garde approaches in anticancer therapy. Their distinguished reactivity and properties, closely linked to their final applications, justify the extensive research conducted on their preparation and use as smart drug-delivery systems (DDSs). Multiple studies have demonstrated that thiomer-rich nanoformulations can overcome major drawbacks found when administering diverse active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), especially in cancer therapy. This work focuses on providing a complete and concise review of the synthetic tools available to thiolate cationic and anionic polymers, in particular chitosan (CTS) and hyaluronic acid (HA), respectively, drawing attention to the most successful procedures. Their chemical reactivity and most relevant properties regarding their use in anticancer formulations are also discussed. In addition, a variety of NP formation procedures are outlined, as well as their use in cancer therapy, particularly for taxanes and siRNA. It is expected that the current work could clarify the main synthetic strategies available, with their scope and drawbacks, as well as provide some insight into thiomer chemistry. Therefore, this review can inspire new research strategies in the development of efficient formulations for the treatment of cancer.Entities:
Keywords: EPR effect; anticancer therapy; chitosan; disulfide bonds; glutathione; hyaluronic acid; mucoadhesion; nanoformulations; nanotechnology; permeation enhancer; preactivated; siRNA; smart DDS; taxanes; thiolated polymers; thiolation; thiomers
Year: 2021 PMID: 34201403 PMCID: PMC8227107 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13060854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Estimated number of deaths by the main types of cancer in the United States, for both sexes, in 2020. Data obtained from [1].
Figure 2(a) The six hallmarks of cancer; (b) emerging hallmarks and enabling characteristics. Reprinted with permission from [33] (Copyright 2011 Elsevier Editorial).
Figure 3Schematic representation of the passive targeting of nanomedicines (EPR effect) in human tumors. Numbers represent some major differences found in tumor microenvironments of human cancers in contrast with murine tumors. Reprinted with permission from [39] (Copyright 2016 Elsevier Editorial).
Figure 4Selected examples of reactivity of thiomers.
Figure 5Representation of the concentrations of RSH and RS− (in percentages, calculated from the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation) for Cys based on its pKa.
Figure 6General structure of thiomers with protected-preactivated sulfhydryl groups with 2-pyridylthio substructure (2-MNA: 2-mercaptonicotinic acid; 6-MNAm: 6-mercaptonicotinamide).
Figure 7Mechanisms of (a) radical- and (b) nucleophile-initiated thiol–ene additions.
Figure 8Reported routes to thiolated multiamino polymers.
Mercaptocarboxylic acids (HS-R-COOH) used for the preparation of CTS-based thiomers by means of 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDAC)-mediated coupling reactions (Reaction 1a in Figure 8).
| Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formula | Abbrev. | Formula | Abbrev. | ||||
|
|
| GSH | [ | ||||
|
| Cys | [ |
| MSPA | [ | ||
|
| TLA | [ |
| MCA | [ | ||
|
| NAP | [ |
| -- | [ | ||
|
| -- | [ |
| 4-MBA | [ | ||
|
| NAC | [ |
| 6-MNA | [ | ||
Note: MBA: 4-mercaptobutanoic acid; MHA: 6-mercaptohexanoic acid; MOA: 8-mercaptooctanoic acid; MPA: 3-mercaptopropanoic acid; MUA: 11-mercaptoundecanoic acid.
Scheme 1Example of preactivation reaction of thiomers containing free sulfhydryl groups with disulfides derived from nicotinic acid by thiol–disulfide exchange reaction (Reaction 1b in Figure 8). 2,2′-DTNA: 2,2′-dithiodinicotinic acid; 2-MNA: 2-mercaptonicotinic acid.
Disulfides used for the preactivation via a thiol–disulfide exchange reaction of already-prepared thiomers (Reaction 1b in Figure 8).
| Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formula | Abbrev. | Formula | Abbrev. | ||||
|
| 2,2′-DTNA | [ |
| 6,6′-DTNA | [ | ||
|
| MPPT | [ |
| 6,6′-DTNAm | [ | ||
Disulfides used for the formation of preactivated chitosan-based thiomers by 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDAC)-mediated coupling reactions (Reaction 2 in Figure 8) between the carboxylic acid moiety from the reagent and the amino groups from the polymer.
| Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formula | Abbreviations | Formula | Abbreviations | ||||
|
| 2,2′-DTNA | [ |
| NAC-6-MNAm | [ | ||
(Protected) thiol-containing active esters (N-hydroxysuccinimide esters) for thiolation of multiamino polymers and chemical structure of the reactive acetimidate isopropyl (acetylthio)acetimidate (i-PATAI). Reagents used for Reactions 3 and 4 in Figure 8.
| Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formula | Abbrev. | Formula | Abbrev. | ||||
|
| SATP | [ |
| SPDP | [ | ||
|
| SATA | [ |
| Sulfo-LC-SPDP | [ | ||
|
| -- | [ |
| -- | [ | ||
|
| [ | ||||||
Nucleophilic thiolating agents used for nucleophilic substitution reactions of multiamino polymers (Reactions 5 and 6 in Figure 8).
| Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formula | Abbreviations | Formula | Abbreviations | ||||
|
| -- | Reacc. 5: [ |
| DMTD | [ | ||
|
| AZ | [ | |||||
Thiolactones and 2-iminothiolane used as thiolating agents in reactions with multiamino polymers (Reactions 7 and 8 in Figure 8).
| Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | Reaction Code | Compound | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formula | Abbrev. | Formula | Abbrev. | ||||
|
| -- | [ |
| -- | [ | ||
|
| HT | [ |
| -- | [ | ||
Figure 9Reported routes to thiolate multicarboxyl polymers.
Methodology (related to Figure 9), anionic polymer, thiolating agents, and coupling reagents used for the preparation of thiomers derived from multicarboxyl polymers.
| Reaction Code | Polymer | Compound | Coupling Reagents Used and Other Reaction Details | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formula | Abbrev. | ||||
|
| HA | CSA | 1.- EDAC + NHS (2 h) | [ | |
|
| PAA | Cys | EDAC (in H2O) | [ | |
|
| Pec | Cys | EDAC | [ | |
|
| HA | 1.- EDAC + NHS | [ | ||
|
| HA | 1.- EDAC + HOBt | [ | ||
|
| HA | DTPH | 1. EDAC | [ | |
|
| HA | 1. EDAC | [ | ||
|
| HA | NAC-TPH | EDAC + NHS | [ | |
|
| PAA | Cys-2-MNA | EDAC + NHS (in H2O) | [ | |
|
| Pec | Cys-2-MNA | EDAC + NHS | [ | |
|
| HA | SPDP | 1.- Diamine(C6) + EDAC | [ | |
Note: HA: hyaluronic acid; CDI: 1,1’-carbonyldiimidazole; DCM: dichloromethane; DIC: 1,3-diisopropylcarbodiimide; DMAP: 4-(dimethylamino)pyridine; DMF: N,N-dimethylformamide; DTT: dithiothreitol; EDAC: 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide; HOBt: N-hydroxybenzotriazole; NHS: N-hydroxysuccinimide; PAA: poly(acrylic acid); Pec: pectin; TCEP: tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine; XrL: crosslinked.
Scheme 2Transformation of HA to preactivated thiol-bearing HA (Reaction 6 from Figure 9) for its later crosslinking with the macro-crosslinker PEG-dithiol [138].
NPs formation from hyaluronic acid and chitosan-based thiomers.
| System | Particle Formation Method | Crosslinker(s) | APIs | Thiomer | NP Size (nm)/PdI | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Microparticles | Spray-drying technique | --- | FDA | CTS–NAC | 800–2270/--- | [ |
| NP | Self-assembly of the amphiphilic material | --- | Docetaxel | CTS–GSH– | <200/<0.15 | [ |
| NP | Self-assembly of the amphiphilic material | Air core XrL (ultrasonication) | Methotrexate | CM–CTS–Ph–SH a | 160/0.055 | [ |
| NP | Ionic gelation | Na2SO4 | DOX or | CTS–NAC | 150–300/--- | [ |
| NP | Ionic gelation | TPP | FD4 | CTS–TGA with TPP | 220–280/--- | [ |
| NLC | Polyelectrolyte complex formation | Negatively charged CUR-loaded NLC | Curcumin | CTS–NAC | 89/--- | [ |
| Hybrid nanoplex | Polyelectrolyte complex formation | HA of reduced Mw | FD4 | QA–CTS–TGA–SH or | 371–376/0.39–0.41 | [ |
| Micelleplexes | Double polyelectrolyte complex formation: | For step 1: pIL-12 | DOX and pIL-12 | HA–SH | 98–192/--- | [ |
| Hybrid nanoplex | Polyelectrolyte complex formation and | Negatively charged insulin | Insulin | Thiomalyl–CTS | 365/--- | [ |
| Nanosuspension | Polyelectrolyte complex formation and | HA | Isoniazid | CTS–TGA | 300–500/--- | [ |
| NP | Polyelectrolyte complex method and | bFGF | bFGF | Carboxymethyl(sulfate)–CTS–thiobutylamidine | 218–290/--- | [ |
| NP | Polyelectrolyte complex method and | Poly-siRNA | siRNA | Glycol–CTS–SH | ~300/--- | [ |
| NP | Polyelectrolyte complex method, | Poly-siRNA | siRNA | HA–SH | 169/0.108 | [ |
a Thiolating agent: 4-mercaptobenzoic acid. 6-MNAm: 6-Mercaptonicotinamide; ASOND: antisense oligonucleotide; bFGF: basic fibroblast growth factors; CM: carboxymethyl; CTS: chitosan; CUR: curcumin; Cys: cysteine; DOX: doxorubicin; FD4: fluorescein isothiocyanate–dextran; FDA: fluorescein diacetate; GSH: glutathione; HA: hyaluronic acid; HPMAm: hydroxypropylmethacrylamide mono- or dilactate; Mw: molecular weight; NAC: N-acetylcysteine; NAP: N-acetylpenicillamine; NLC: nanostructured lipid carrier; PAA: poly(acrylic acid); pIL-12: plasmid-encoding IL-12 gene; PdI: polydispersity index: PMMA: poly(methyl methacrylate); QA: quaternary ammonium; siRNA: small interfering RNA; TGA: thioglycolic acid; TPP: tripolyphosphate; XrL: crosslinked.
Figure 10Chemical structures of paclitaxel, docetaxel, and 10-deacetylbaccatin, the building block for their semisynthesis.
Figure 11Mechanism of action of taxanes. Paclitaxel and docetaxel can bind microtubules during the M phase of the cell cycle, therefore blocking their depolymerization. By doing so, they interfere with the function of the spindle apparatus, so chromosomes are unable to move to the opposite sides of the dividing cells structures during anaphase.
Figure 12Summary of the assembly of PTX-loaded micelles (PTX–NHOA) based on an N-acetylcysteine-modified hyaluronic acid–octadecylamine conjugate. Improved oral paclitaxel delivery through the intestinal mucus layer was achieved. Reprinted with permission from [155] (Copyright 2019 Elsevier Editorial).
Summary of selected studies regarding efficient delivery of taxanes and other APIs in cancer therapy, conducted with thiomer-based formulations.
| Thiomer | Formulation | Loaded Compound | Cancer Cells Studied In Vitro | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thiolated CTS | Nanoparticles | Paclitaxel | NIH 3T3 and T47D (breast carcinoma) cells | [ |
| Thiolated CTS | Nanoparticles | Docetaxel | Caco-2 (colorectal adenocarcinoma) and MCF-7 (breast carcinoma) cell lines | [ |
| Thiolated CTS | Nanoparticles | Paclitaxel | A549 (adenocarcinomic human alveolar basal epithelia) cells | [ |
| Thiolated | Nanoparticles | Paclitaxel | Caco-2 cells and | [ |
| Thiolated | Nanoparticles | Paclitaxel | Only in vivo studies (wild-type rats vs. mammary-cancer-induced rats) | [ |
| Thiolated OPV | Nanoparticles | Paclitaxel | A549 (adenocarcinomic human alveolar basal epithelia) cells | [ |
| Thiolated sodium alginate | Nanoparticles | Docetaxel | HT-29 (human colon cancer) cells and L929 (mouse fibroblast) cells | [ |
| Thiolated PEG + maleimide-functionalized HA | Microbeads | Docetaxel | NIH/3T3 (mouse embryonic fibroblast) cells and 4T1 (mouse breast cancer) cells | [ |
| Dextran a | Hydrogel | Paclitaxel | - | [ |
| PMAG + poly(amino acid) | Nanoparticles | Paclitaxel | A549 (human lung carcinoma) and MCF-7 (human breast adenocarcinoma) cells | [ |
| Thiolated CTS c | Nanostructured | Curcumin | Isolated rabbit cornea cells | [ |
| Thiolated CTS c | Nanoparticles | Doxorubicin and antisense oligonucleotides | T47D (human breast epithelial tumor) cells | [ |
| Thiolated hexanoyl glycol CTS c | Mucoadhesive thermogelling polymer | - | HeLa (cervical cancer) cells, human fibroblasts, epithelial cells, and epithelial cell aggregate | [ |
| Thiolated HA c | Micelleplexes (polymetformin + hyaluronic acid) | Doxorubicin and plasmid-encoding IL-12 gene | 4T1 (mouse breast cancer) cell line | [ |
| Thiolated amidized glycol CTS c | Dual secured | Melittin and other amphipathic peptides | MCF-7 (breast carcinoma), HCT-116 (human colon cancer), SKOV-3 (human ovarian cancer), and NCI/ADR–RES (ovarian tumor) cell lines | [ |
| PLGA and OCTS b,c | Nanoparticles | CHC and CTX | U251 and SW1088 (glioma cell lines) | [ |
| Thiolated carboxymethyl chitosan c | Nanoparticles | Methotrexate | HeLa (cervical cancer) cells | [ |
| POEGA + PDEGA (star polymers) | Nanoparticles | - | Jurkat (T-ALL) and Nalm-6 (B-ALL) cancer cell lines | [ |
a This work did not use a thiolated polymer per se for the synthesis of nanoparticles, but involved a polymer linked with disulfide bonds to thiolated human serum albumin. b This work did not use a thiolated polymer per se for the synthesis of nanoparticles but involved a PEG crosslinker to link the loaded compounds to the polymer via Michael reaction. c These works correspond to approaches that were not directly applied to taxanes, but can be considered as new horizons and references when tackling newer formulations for the administration of these APIs. CHC: alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid; CTS: chitosan; CTX: cetuximab; GSH: reduced glutathione; HA–OA: hyaluronic acid–octadecylamine; IL-12: interleukin 12; NAC: N-acetylcysteine; NAP: N-acetylpenicillamine; OCTS: oligomeric chitosan; OPV: oligo(p-phenylenevinylene); PDEGA: poly(diethylene glycol ethyl ether acrylate); PEG: polyethylenge glycol; PLA–PCL–TPGS: poly(lactide-co-ε-caprolactone)-d-α-tocopheryl polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate; PLGA: poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid); PMAG: poly(2-deoxy-2-methacrylamido-d-glucose); PMMA: poly(methyl methacrylate); POEGA: poly(oligoethylene glycol methyl ether acrylate).
Figure 13Basic functioning of RISC-based gene-silencing system.
Figure 14Formation, intracellular delivery, and mechanism of action of thiolated glycol chitosan–nanoparticles containing siRNA against P-gp. (a) Thiolation of siRNA and glycol chitosan. (b) Formation of NPs. (c) Glutathione-dependent siRNA delivery in cells. Reprinted with permission from [124] (Copyright 2015 Elsevier Editorial).
Figure 15(a) Formation of siRNA-loaded TAT–HA–TMC–TC NPs. (b) Intracellular delivery and mechanism of action of siRNA-loaded TAT–HA–TMC–TC NPs. Reprinted with permission from [181] (Copyright 2021 Elsevier Editorial).
Summary of studies regarding efficient anticancer siRNA delivery conducted with thiomer-based formulations.
| Thiomer | Formulation | Loaded Compound | Cancer Cells Studied In Vitro | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thiolated glycol CTS | Nanoparticles | MDR-1 siRNA | MCF-7/ADR (Adriamycin-resistant breast cancer cells) | [ |
| Thiolated glycol CTS | Nanoparticles | VEGF siRNA | RFP-expressing B16F10 (murine melanoma) cells. | [ |
| HPMAm- | Multiconjugates | siRNA and folate | - | [ |
| Thiolated TMC (both alone and with HA) | Polyplexes | siRNA | H1299 (human lung cancer) cells | [ |
| Thiolated HA + PSR | Nanoparticles | Hydrophobic chemotherapeutics + siRNA | A549 (adenocarcinomic human alveolar basal epithelia) cells | [ |
| Thiolated HA | Nanoparticles (siRNA with calcium phosphate core + thiolated hyaluronic | Bcl-2 siRNA | B16-F10 (murine melanoma) cells | [ |
| Thiolated chitosan + TMC | Nanoparticles | PD-L1 and | B16-F10 (murine melanoma) and 4T1 (mouse breast cancer) cell lines | [ |
| Thiolated PEI | Nanoparticles | Akt1 siRNA | CT-26 (mouse colon cancer) cells. In vivo studies in mouse tumor models | [ |
| Thiolated gelatin | Nanoparticles | siRNA | RFP-expressing B16F10 (murine melanoma) cells. | [ |
a This work did not use a thiolated polymer for the generation of nanoparticles, but it is an approach that can easily serve as the basis for the synthesis of new HPMAm-s-AMPAm-based thiomers. Bcl-2: B-cell lymphoma 2 gene; CTS: chitosan; HA: hyaluronic acid; HPMAm-s-AMPAm: N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide-s-N-(3-aminopropyl)methacrylamide; MDR: multidrug resistance gene; PD-L1: programmed cell death-ligand 1; PEI: polyethylenimine; PSR: octyl-modified polyethyleneimine containing disulfide linkages; siRNA: small interfering ribonucleic acid; STAT-3: signal transducer and activator of transcription-3; TMC: N,N,N-trimethylated chitosan; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor.