DOI

Synthetic poly(amino acids) are a unique class of macromolecules imitating natural polypeptides and are widely considered as carriers for drug and gene delivery. In this work, we synthesized, characterized and studied the properties of amphiphilic copolymers obtained by the post-polymerization modification of poly(α,L-glutamic acid) with various hydrophobic and basic L-amino acids and D-glucosamine. The resulting glycopolypeptides were capable of forming nanoparticles that exhibited reduced macrophage uptake and were non-toxic to human lung epithelial cells (BEAS-2B). Moreover, the developed nanoparticles were suitable for loading hydrophobic cargo. In particular, paclitaxel nanoformulations had a size of 170-330 nm and demonstrated a high cytostatic efficacy against human lung adenocarcinoma (A549). In general, the obtained nanoparticles were comparable in terms of their characteristics and properties to those based on amphiphilic (glyco)polypeptides obtained by copolymerization methods.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1049
JournalInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
Volume24
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 5 Jan 2023

    Research areas

  • Amino Acids, Drug Carriers/chemistry, Drug Delivery Systems/methods, Glutamic Acid, Humans, Nanoparticles/chemistry, Peptides/chemistry, Polymerization, paclitaxel, drug delivery, amphiphilic poly(amino acids), polypeptides, nanoparticles, hydrophobic drugs, post-polymerization modification

ID: 114403610