Glycopolymer nanomicelles: pH-responsive drug delivery, endocytosis pathway, autophagy behavior, and the effect of autophagy inhibitors

Abstract Glycopolymer drug delivery nanosystems have attracted increasing attention in the field of sustainable biomaterials and clinical biomedicine, while few studies addressed their intracellular drug delivery properties, endocytosis pathways, intracellular trafficking, autophagy behaviors and th...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhao Wang, Jingjing Sun, Lin Jia, Ruilong Sheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2025-06-01
Series:Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10856-024-06837-4
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Abstract Glycopolymer drug delivery nanosystems have attracted increasing attention in the field of sustainable biomaterials and clinical biomedicine, while few studies addressed their intracellular drug delivery properties, endocytosis pathways, intracellular trafficking, autophagy behaviors and the effect of autophagy inhibitors. Based on our previous study, in this work, a pH-responsive glycopolymer (PMAgala18-b-P(MAA24-co-MAChol6)) was synthesized and used as a drug delivery carrier, to encapsulate antitumor drug doxorubicin (DOX) into nanomicelles, with high DOX loading efficiency and pH-responsive DOX release properties. The cytotoxicity, cell proliferation inhibition, endocytosis pathway, intracellular trafficking/localization, and autophagy behavior of the blank glycopolymer micelles and/or DOX-loaded micelles were studied in a Human Glioblastoma Carcinoma (H4) and green fluorescent protein-tagged H4-GFP-LC3 cell lines. The glycopolymer micelles could be taken up into the cells through favorable caveolae-mediated and clathrin-mediated endocytic pathways, and their intracellular trafficking/localization were associated with endosome-lysosome systems. Notably, after treating with DOX-loaded glycopolymer micelles (or free DOX) to the H4-GFP-LC3 cells, exogenous substances-induced autophagosome accumulation was observed. The autophagy inhibitors: 3-methyladenine (3-MA) and hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) were used to monitor the autophagy behavior of H4-GFP-LC3 cells incubated with the micelles. Interestingly, the autophagy inhibitors could significantly enhance the antitumor performance of the free DOX and/or DOX-loaded micelles, the drug combination effect of autophagy inhibitors and DOX was further studied by Bliss independent model analysis. Taken together, this work provided a preliminary understanding of the intracellular drug delivery properties of glycopolymer micelles and demonstrated the effect of different autophagy inhibitors, which might inspire future innovation of “autophagy regulator-combined nanotherapeutics” toward efficient cancer chemotherapy. Graphical Abstract
ISSN:1573-4838