2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(157p) Polymer Amphiphiles for Directed Self-Assembly Around Hepatitis B Virus Particles
Authors
Methods: Poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PEG-b-PLGA) and poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(lactic acid) (PEG-b-PLA) were added to human blood components by solvent injection and imaged using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to determine the effect of free polymer in the blood. Beads coated with Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) were produced to be used in place of HBV particles. Carboxylated polystyrene beads were sized by dynamic light scattering, then covalently coated with HBsAg and re-measured to confirm successful coating. Antibody fragments were prepared by digestion with pepsin and subsequently reduced with cysteamine, then purified by centrifugal filtration. Size was measured with non-reducing SDS-PAGE. The antibody fragments were conjugated to maleimide-PEG-b-PLA or maleimide-PEG-b-PLGA by thiol-maleimide reaction. An indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to measure binding activity of the antibody fragment alone and fragment-conjugated polymer to confirm binding ability of the conjugated polymer. For a non-specific binding control, un-modified PEG-b-PLA was measured by solvent injection of the polymer into a dilute solution of antigen coated beads, with size measurements taken by dynamic light scattering before solvent injection and immediately, three hours, and 24 hours after.
Results: PEG-b-PLA had no negative effect on various blood components, but PEG-b-PLGA led to disruption of plasma and platelets, indicating that it would not be suitable for injection into the blood. SDS-PAGE showed successful fragmentation of the antibody and indirect confirmation of successful antibody-polymer conjugation. The signal produced by ELISA was lower for the fragment-conjugated polymer than the unconjugated antibody fragment, but remained significantly above background levels indicating that binding still occurs. DLS results demonstrate the successful coating of antigen onto the polystyrene beads, but was determined not to be reliable for measuring non-specific encapsulation. Plans for future work include TEM imaging of the non-specific encapsulation, size-exclusion chromatography to confirm antibody-polymer conjugation, and specific encapsulation of the coated beads by solvent injection. We expect that the unconjugated polymer will show minimal encapsulation of the coated beads, instead predominantly forming empty polymersomes. In contrast, we expect that the specific encapsulation will show polymersome formation around the beads.
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