4.8 Article

Acid-Resistant and Physiological pH-Responsive DNA Hydrogel Composed of A-Motif and i-Motif toward Oral Insulin Delivery

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 12, Pages 5461-5470

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c13426

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NanoBio Lab (Biomedical Research Council, A*STAR)
  2. Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE) (Science and Engineering Research Council, A*STAR)
  3. CDF, A*STAR [C210112014]

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An acid-resistant DNA hydrogel stable at extremely low pH values (as low as 1.2) has been developed. The hydrogel is formed by rational design of adenine (A)-rich and cytosine (C)-rich oligonucleotides, which can cross-link into duplex and quadruplex structures at different pH ranges. Under physiological pH, the hydrogel dissociates into a solution state. This acid-resistant and pH-responsive hydrogel has potential applications in oral drug delivery to acidic environments. Insulin was successfully encapsulated and orally administered using this hydrogel in diabetic rats.
An acid-resistant DNA hydrogel that is stable in an extremely acidic environment with pH as low as 1.2 has not been reported before, largely due to the instability of DNA-hybridized structures. To achieve this, adenine (A)-rich and cytosine (C)-rich oligonucleotides are rationally designed and integrated to form copolymers with acrylamide monomers via free-radical polymerization. In an acidic environment (pH 1.2-6.0), the generated copolymers form a hydrogel state, which is cross-linked by parallel A-motif duplex configurations (pH 1.2-3.0) and quadruplex i-motif structures (pH 4.0-6.0) due to the protonation of A and C bases, respectively. Specifically, the protonated A-rich sequences under pH 1.2-3.0 form a stable parallel A-motif duplex cross-linking unit through reverse Hoogsteen interaction and electrostatic attraction. Hemi-protonated C bases under mildly acidic pH (4.0-6.0) form quadruplex i-motif cross-linking configuration via Hoogsteen interaction. Under physiological pH, both A and C bases deprotonated, resulting in the separation of A-motif and i-motif to A-rich and C-rich single strands, respectively, and thereby the dissociation of the DNA hydrogel into the solution state. The acid-resistant and physiological pH-responsive DNA hydrogel was further developed for oral drug delivery to the hostile acidic environment in the stomach (pH 1.2), duodenum (pH 5.0), and small intestine (pH 7.2), where the drug would be released and absorbed. As a proof of concept, insulin was encapsulated in the DNA hydrogel and orally administered to diabetic rats. In vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated the potential usage of the DNA hydrogel for oral drug delivery.

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