Discotic amphiphilic supramolecular polymers for drug release and cell activation with light

Abstract

The limited efficacy shown by drug delivery systems so far prompts the development of new molecular approaches for releasing drugs in a controlled and selective manner. Light is a privileged stimulus for delivery because it can be applied in sharp spatiotemporal patterns and is orthogonal to most biological processes. Supramolecular polymers form molecular nanostructures whose robustness, versatility, and responsivity to different stimuli have generated wide interest in materials chemistry. However, their application as drug delivery vehicles has received little attention. We built supramolecular polymers based on discotic amphiphiles that self-assemble in linear nanostructures in water. They can integrate diverse amphiphilic bioligands and release them upon illumination, acutely producing functional effects under physiological conditions. We devised two strategies for drug incorporation into the photoswitchable nanofibers. In the co-assembly strategy, discotic monomers with and without conjugated bioligands were co-assembled in helicoidal supramolecular fibers. In the drug embedding approach, we integrated a potent agonist of muscarinic receptors into the discotic polymer by noncovalent stacking interactions. This ligand can be released on demand with light ex situ and in situ, rapidly activating the target receptor and triggering intracellular responses. These novel discotic supramolecular polymers can be light-driven drug carriers for small, planar, and amphiphilic drugs.

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Subject

Química

Pages

11 p.

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Grant Agreement Number

EU Horizon 2020 Framework Programme for Research and Innovation, including the European Innovation Council Pathfinder (Phototheraport, 101130883)

Human Brain Project (WaveScalES, SGA3, 945539)

Information and Communication Technologies (Deeper, ICT-36-2020-101016787)

Government of Catalonia (CERCA Programme; AGAUR 2021-SGR-01410)

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (DEEP RED, grant PID2019-111493RB-I00; EPILLUM, grant AEI/10.13039/501100011033; STROMATARGET, grant PID2019-109450RB-I00/AEI/10.13039/501100011033; Research Network in Biomedicine eBrains-Spain, RED2022-134823-E; Ramón y Cajal Investigator grant RYC2021-033056-I financed by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR to G. M.)

Erasmus + Unipharma Graduates Programme to R. S.

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Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

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