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|a Vohidov, Farrukh
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
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|a Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT
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|a Milling, Lauren Elizabeth
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|a Chen, Qixian
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|a Zhang, Wenxu
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|a Bhagchandani, Sachin Haresh
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|a Nguyen, Hung V.-T.
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|a Irvine, Darrell J
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|a Johnson, Jeremiah A.
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|a ABC triblock bottlebrush copolymer-based injectable hydrogels: design, synthesis, and application to expanding the therapeutic index of cancer immunochemotherapy
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|b Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC),
|c 2020-09-15T21:19:18Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/127276
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|a Bottlebrush copolymers are a versatile class of macromolecular architectures with broad applications in the fields of drug delivery, self-assembly, and polymer networks. Here, the modular nature of graft-through ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP) is exploited to synthesize "ABC"triblock bottlebrush copolymers (TBCs) from polylactic acid (PLA), polyethylene glycol (PEG), and poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) macromonomers. Due to the hydrophobicity of their PLA domains, these TBCs self-assemble in aqueous media at room temperature to yield uniform ∼100 nm micelles that can encapsulate a wide range of therapeutic agents. Heating these micellar solutions above the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of PNIPAM (∼32 °C) induces the rapid formation of multi-compartment hydrogels with PLA and PNIPAM domains acting as physical crosslinks. Following the synthesis and characterization of these materials in vitro, TBC micelles loaded with various biologically active small molecules were investigated as injectable hydrogels for sustained drug release in vivo. Specifically, intratumoral administration of TBCs containing paclitaxel and resiquimod-the latter a potent Toll-like receptor (TLR) 7/8 agonist-into mice bearing subcutaneous CT26 tumors resulted in a significantly enhanced therapeutic index compared to the administration of these two drugs alone. This effect is attributed to the TBC hydrogel maintaining a high local drug concentration, thus reducing systemic immune activation and local inflammation. Collectively, this work represents, to our knowledge, the first example of thermally-responsive TBCs designed for multi-compartment hydrogel formation, establishing these materials as versatile scaffolds for self-assembly and drug delivery.
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|a National Institutes of Health (Grant 1R01CA220468-01)
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|a National Institute of General Medical Sciences (Grant T32-GM008334)
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|a en
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|a Article
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|t Chemical Science
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