We developed a novel technique for the efficient conjugation of oligonucleotides with various alkyl azides such as fluorescent dyes, biotin, cholesterol, N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc), etc. using copper-catalysed alkyne-azide cycloaddition on the solid phase and CuI·P(OEt) as a catalyst. Conjugation is carried out in an oligonucleotide synthesizer in fully automated mode and is coupled to oligonucleotide synthesis and on-column deprotection. We also suggest a set of reagents for the construction of diverse conjugates. The sequential double-click procedure using a pentaerythritol-derived tetraazide followed by the addition of a GalNAc or Tris-GalNAc alkyne gives oligonucleotide-GalNAc dendrimer conjugates in good yields with minimal excess of sophisticated alkyne reagents. The approach is suitable for high-throughput synthesis of oligonucleotide conjugates ranging from fluorescent DNA probes to various multi-GalNAc derivatives of 2'-modified siRNA.
In this work, we have developed covalent
and low molecular weight
docetaxel delivery systems based on conjugation with N-acetyl-d-galactosamine and studied their properties related
to hepatocellular carcinoma cells. The resulting glycoconjugates have
an excellent affinity to the asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR) in
the nanomolar range of concentrations and a high cytotoxicity level
comparable to docetaxel. Likewise, we observed the 21–75-fold
increase in water solubility in comparison with parent docetaxel and
prodrug lability to intracellular conditions with half-life values
from 25.5 to 42 h. We also found that the trivalent conjugate possessed
selective toxicity against hepatoma cells vs control cell lines (20–35
times). The absence of such selectivity in the case of monovalent
conjugates indicates the effect of ligand valency. Specific ASGPR-mediated
cellular uptake of conjugates was proved in vitro using fluorescent-labeled
analogues. In addition, we showed an enhanced generation of reactive
oxygen species in the HepG2 cells, which could be inhibited by the
natural ligand of ASGPR. Overall, the obtained results highlight the
potential of ASGPR-directed cytostatic taxane drugs for selective
therapy of hepatocellular carcinoma.
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