Drug catalyzed polymerization yields one pot nanomedicines

Paul Joshua Hurst, Kyle J. Gassaway, Mohammed Faris Abouchaleh, Nehal S. Idris,Chelsea R. Jones, Chris A. Dicksion,James S. Nowick,Joseph P. Patterson

RSC Applied Polymers(2024)

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摘要
Ring-opening polymerization (ROP) is a powerful method for the synthesis of biocompatible and biodegradable polyester-based amphiphilic block copolymers, which are an excellent nanomaterial class for a wide range of pharmaceutical applications. These block copolymers are synthesized using a catalyst, which is typically purified out. In a separate step, the purified block copolymers are then assembled and drug-loaded for medical use. This multistep process limits the scalability of these nanomaterials restraining their industrial use. Recently, we developed a synchronous polymerization and self-assembly process for polyester-based block copolymer nanomaterials coined Ring-Opening Polymerization-Induced Crystallization-Driven Self Assembly (ROPI-CDSA). In ROPI-CDSA, an organocatalyst facilitates the chain extension of mPEG with l-lactide, yielding semicrystalline self-assemblies. Here, we demonstrate that pharmaceuticals with similar functional groups to ROP organocatalysts can catalyze ROPI-CDSA reactions, resulting in the formation of drug-embedded nanomaterials. The major advantage of this one pot approach is that no additional synthetic steps or purification are required. As a proof-of-principle study, we use two antibiotic drug molecules, chlorhexidine, and trimethoprim, as catalysts. Chlorhexidine acts as a co-initiator and a catalyst leading to drug conjugation whereas trimethoprim acts solely as a catalyst leading to drug encapsulation. The resulting drug-embedded block copolymer nanoparticles retain potent antibacterial activity. We anticipate that this strategy can be extended to other examples of PISA for the scalable production of drug-loaded polymer suspensions.
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