4.4 Article

Nano-hydrogels of methoxy polyethylene glycol-grafted branched polyethyleneimine via biodegradable cross-linking of Zn2+-ionomer micelle template

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOPARTICLE RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11051-013-2134-z

Keywords

Nanotechnology; Self-assembly; Polyethyleneimine; Ionomer complex; Biodegradable cross-linking; Nano-hydrogel; Biocompatibility

Funding

  1. SUMS grant

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Soft polymeric nanomaterials were synthesized by the template-assisted method involving self-association of methoxy polyethylene glycol-g-branched polyethyleneimine (mPEG-g-branched PEI) ionomer by transition metal ions such as Zn2+ followed by chemical cross-linking of the polyamine core by dithiopropionic acid. The formation of donor-acceptor complexes of Zn2+ and PEI ionomer was characterized by FT-IR spectroscopy and potentiometric titration. Turbidimetry was performed to study the solution property of the complexes which depended on pH, relative weight fraction of mPEG, and the molar ratio of Zn2+. The cross-linking reaction was studied by TNBS assay, H-1-NMR, and size exclusion chromatography. Upon removal of Zn2+ from cl-mPEG-g-branched PEI/Zn2+ at pH 3 by dialysis, the resulting cross-linked self-assembly represented a uniform, stable, and less positively charged hydrogel-like nanosphere with an intensity-averaged size ranging from 150 to 250 nm as determined by a Zetasizer. Atomic forced microscopy imaging was performed in intermittent contact mode in air that revealed discrete and oval-to-spherically shaped particles with average sizes ranging from 40 to 50 nm depending on the degree of cross-linking. This functional nanocarrier is expected to exhibit some key features such as active encapsulation of negatively charged hydrophilic agents in the swollen core of polyamine network and a hydrophilic mPEG shell which provides an increased solubility and passive targeting of active pharmaceutical agents to impaired tissues. The nano-hydrogels especially at 12 % degrees of cross-link demonstrated excellent biocompatibility determined by different experiments such as albumin aggregation, erythrocyte aggregation, hemolysis, and MTT cytotoxicity assay. Moreover, biodegradability of the cross-links as shown by the Ellman assay can offer a time-dependent degradation and redox-stimulated release of active agents.

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