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Displacement Affinity Release of Antibodies from Injectable Hydrogels

Cite this: ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2019, 11, 34, 30648–30660
Publication Date (Web):August 5, 2019
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.9b12572
Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society
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Abstract

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Current methods to tune release rates of therapeutic antibodies (Abs) for local delivery are complex and routinely require bioconjugations that may reduce Ab bioactivity. To rapidly tune release profiles of bioactive Abs, we developed a biophysical interaction system within a neutravidin modified poly(carboxybetaine) hydrogel (pCB-NT) that tunes release rates of desthiobiotinylated Abs (D-Abs) using a constant hydrogel and D-Ab combination. Herein, we delivered desthiobiotinylated bevacizumab (D-Bv), a recombinant humanized monoclonal IgG1 Ab for antiangiogenic cancer therapies. D-Bv’s high affinity for pCB-NT (KD 7.8 × 10–10 M; t1/2 ∼ 2 h) produces a slow D-Bv release rate (∼5 ng day–1) that is increased by the dissolution of hydrogel encapsulated biotin derivative pellets, which displaces D-Bv from pCB-NT binding sites. In contrast to traditional affinity systems, displacement affinity release of Abs (DARA) does not require Ab or hydrogel modifications for each unique release rate. D-Bv release rates were tuned by simply altering the total biotin derivative concentration; the effective first-order (keff) and mass per day release rates were tuned 25- and 8-fold, respectively. Local surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) and biolayer interferometry (BLI) confirmed the D-Bv binding affinity for the corresponding ligand and Fc receptor, demonstrating that the biophysical interaction system is amenable to anticancer Abs for receptor or cytokine blockade and immune cell recruitment to cancer cells.

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The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications website at DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b12572.

  • Methods for maximum D-Bv pCB-NT gel loading, gelation time determination, injection of pCB-NT gels, DLS; polymer characterization; polymer synthesis scheme; neutravidin characterization; D-Bv and B-Bv characterization; in situ gelation experiments; maximum D-Bv loading in pCB-NT hydrogels; first-order release plots of D-Bv and B-Bv from pCB-NT gels; DLS characterization of biotin derivatives; release rate graphs of D-Bv in ng day–1; and cell viability data from DARA components (PDF)

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Cited By


This article is cited by 3 publications.

  1. Xingmei Chen, Hongliang Qian, Haishi Qiao, Bin Dong, Enping Chen, Dechun Huang, Ting Wang, Wei Chen. Tumor-Adhesive and pH-Degradable Microgels by Microfluidics and Photo-Cross-Linking for Efficient Antiangiogenesis and Enhanced Cancer Chemotherapy. Biomacromolecules 2020, 21 (3) , 1285-1294. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.0c00049
  2. Kongchang Wei, Berna Senturk, Martin T. Matter, Xi Wu, Inge K. Herrmann, Markus Rottmar, Claudio Toncelli. Mussel-Inspired Injectable Hydrogel Adhesive Formed under Mild Conditions Features Near-Native Tissue Properties. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 2019, 11 (51) , 47707-47719. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.9b16465
  3. Jianbo Zhao, Xingxing Liang, Hui Cao, Tianwei Tan. Preparation of injectable hydrogel with near-infrared light response and photo-controlled drug release. Bioresources and Bioprocessing 2020, 7 (1) https://doi.org/10.1186/s40643-019-0289-x

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