PEGylating poly(p-phenylene vinylene)-based bioimaging nanoprobes.

Bioimaging CPM-PPV-co-MDMO-PPV Conjugated polymers Nanoparticles Optical properties Protein corona

Journal

Journal of colloid and interface science
ISSN: 1095-7103
Titre abrégé: J Colloid Interface Sci
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0043125

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 Jan 2021
Historique:
received: 17 04 2020
revised: 29 07 2020
accepted: 30 07 2020
pubmed: 21 8 2020
medline: 22 6 2021
entrez: 21 8 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Conjugated polymer nanoparticles (CNPs) have attracted considerable attention within bioimaging due to their excellent optical properties and biocompatibility. However, unspecific adsorption of proteins hampers their effective use as advanced bioimaging probes. Controlled methodologies made possible tailor-made functional poly(p-phenylene vinylene), enabling one-pot synthesis of CNPs containing functional surface groups. Hence, it should be feasible to PEGylate these CNPs to tune the uptake by cell lines representative for the brain without imparting their optical properties. CNPs consisting of the statistical copolymer 2-(5'-methoxycarbonylpentyloxy)-5-methoxy-1,4-phenylenevinylene and poly(2-methoxy-5-(3',7'-dimethoxyoctyloxy)-1,4-phenylenevinylene) were fabricated by miniemulsion solvent evaporation technique. Surface carboxylic acid groups were used to covalently attach amine-terminated polyethylene glycol (PEG) of different molecular weights. We investigated the effect of grafting CNPs with PEG chains on their intrinsic optical properties, protein adsorption behavior and uptake by representative brain cell lines. PEGylation did not affect the optical properties and biocompatibility of our CNPs. Moreover, a significant decrease in protein corona formation and unspecific uptake in central nervous system cell lines, depending on PEG chain length, was observed. This is the first report indicating that PEGylation does not affect the CNPs role as excellent bioimaging tools and can be adapted to tune biological interactions with brain cells.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32818676
pii: S0021-9797(20)31035-3
doi: 10.1016/j.jcis.2020.07.145
pii:
doi:

Substances chimiques

Polymers 0
Polyvinyls 0
poly(4-phenylenevinylene) 0
Polyethylene Glycols 3WJQ0SDW1A

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

566-575

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Auteurs

Martijn Peters (M)

Institute for Materials Research, Hasselt University, Wetenschapspark 1 and Agoralaan Building D, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium.

Derese Desta (D)

Institute for Materials Research, Hasselt University, Wetenschapspark 1 and Agoralaan Building D, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium; IMEC Associated Lab IMOMEC, Wetenschapspark 1, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium.

Senne Seneca (S)

Institute for Materials Research, Hasselt University, Wetenschapspark 1 and Agoralaan Building D, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium; IMEC Associated Lab IMOMEC, Wetenschapspark 1, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium.

Gunter Reekmans (G)

Institute for Materials Research, Hasselt University, Wetenschapspark 1 and Agoralaan Building D, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium; IMEC Associated Lab IMOMEC, Wetenschapspark 1, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium.

Peter Adriaensens (P)

Institute for Materials Research, Hasselt University, Wetenschapspark 1 and Agoralaan Building D, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium; IMEC Associated Lab IMOMEC, Wetenschapspark 1, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium.

Jean-Paul Noben (JP)

Immunology & Infection, Biomedical Research Institute, Hasselt University, Agoralaan Building C, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium.

Niels Hellings (N)

Immunology & Infection, Biomedical Research Institute, Hasselt University, Agoralaan Building C, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium.

Tanja Junkers (T)

Institute for Materials Research, Hasselt University, Wetenschapspark 1 and Agoralaan Building D, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium; School of Chemistry, Monash University, 19 Rainforest Walk, Clayton, VIC 3800, Australia.

Anitha Ethirajan (A)

Institute for Materials Research, Hasselt University, Wetenschapspark 1 and Agoralaan Building D, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium; IMEC Associated Lab IMOMEC, Wetenschapspark 1, 3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium. Electronic address: jan@uhasselt.be.

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