The use of amphiphilic molecules
such as poly(ethylene glycol)-conjugated
phospholipid (PEG-lipid) enables incorporation into liposome surfaces
by exogenous addition as a result of the self-assembly with lipids.
This technique can be applicable for manipulation of both liposomes
and cells. In this study, we aimed to characterize Tat peptide (YGRKKRRQRRR)-conjugated
PEG-lipids when used to exogenously surface modify liposomes (size:
ca. 100 nm). We earlier reported that cells, which were surface modified
with Tat peptides conjugated to PEG-lipids could attach spontaneously
to material surfaces without any chemical modification. Here, we synthesized
different types of Tat-PEG-lipids by combining PEG of different molecular
weights (5 and 40 kDa) with different lipids with three acyl chains
(myristoyl, palmitoyl, and stearoyl, respectively) and then studied
the spontaneous adsorption of modified liposomes onto a substrate
surface induced by the different Tat-PEG-lipids. The amount of adsorbed
liposomes strongly depended on the number of incorporated Tat-PEG-lipid
moieties: a decrease in both the PEG and the acyl chain lengths led
to adsorption of higher amounts of liposomes. Furthermore, when a
collagenase-cleavable amino acid sequence was inserted between the
Tat sequence and the PEG segment, adsorbed liposomes could be harvested
from the substrate by collagenase treatment with no difference in
desorption efficiency between the different Tat-PEG-lipids. Thus,
Tat-PEG-lipid can be a suitable tool for the manipulation of liposomes
and cells.
Liposome surface coating has been studied to avoid the immunological responses caused by the complement system, and alternative materials to poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) have been explored recently since the production of anti-PEG IgM antibodies has been found in humans. We previously reported a liposome coating with poly(2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine) (poly(MPC))-conjugated lipids (PMPC-lipids) and demonstrated its protective effect on blood protein interactions. Here, we attempted to modify the liposome surface by exogenously adding PMPC-lipids, which were spontaneously incorporated into the outer membrane via hydrophobic interactions. The polymerization degree of the PMPC segment was regulated from 10 to 100. The incorporated ratio of PMPC-lipid increased with a decrease in the degree of PMPC polymerization. Due to surface modification with PMPC-lipids, increase in the length of the PMPC-chain increased the size of the liposomes. The modified liposomes were kept stable for 14 d in terms of their size, polydispersity, and surface properties, where approximately 70% of PMPC-lipids were incorporated into the liposome surface. We demonstrated that liposome surface modification with PMPC-lipids can inhibit protein adsorption when exposed to serum, regardless of the degree of polymerization of PMPC. In addition, the PMPC-lipid modified surface was not recognized by the anti-PEG IgM antibody, whereas PEG-lipid was recognized by the antibody. Thus, we successfully fabricated an inert liposome surface via spontaneous modification with PMPC-lipids, where only the outer bilayer surface was modified. This technique can be available for full loading of water-soluble active pharmaceutical ingredient inside the modified liposome.
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