Design and synthesis of polymer nanoparticles with pH-responsive pan-HDAC inhibitor (C5) derived from norbornene block copolymers to increase C5 solubility and improve its targeted delivery to prostate cancer sites.
This study investigated the incorporation of C5, a pan-HDAC inhibitor, into a norbornene-derived block copolymer with pH-sensitive hydrolysis (PNEG-b-P(Nor-PABA-C5)) to generate NPs for prostate cance
APA
Mathew J, Mishra A, et al. (2025). Design and synthesis of polymer nanoparticles with pH-responsive pan-HDAC inhibitor (C5) derived from norbornene block copolymers to increase C5 solubility and improve its targeted delivery to prostate cancer sites.. Journal of enzyme inhibition and medicinal chemistry, 40(1), 2530557. https://doi.org/10.1080/14756366.2025.2530557
MLA
Mathew J, et al.. "Design and synthesis of polymer nanoparticles with pH-responsive pan-HDAC inhibitor (C5) derived from norbornene block copolymers to increase C5 solubility and improve its targeted delivery to prostate cancer sites.." Journal of enzyme inhibition and medicinal chemistry, vol. 40, no. 1, 2025, pp. 2530557.
PMID
40698624
Abstract
This study investigated the incorporation of C5, a pan-HDAC inhibitor, into a norbornene-derived block copolymer with pH-sensitive hydrolysis (PNEG-b-P(Nor-PABA-C5)) to generate NPs for prostate cancer treatment. Amphiphilic PNEG-b-P(Nor-PABA-C5) formed NPs in aqueous environments, with hydrophobic Nor-PABA-C5 monomers in the core and hydrophilic PNEG monomers on the surface. DLS analysis showed a particle size of 122 ± 12 nm with a PDI of 0.35, confirmed by SEM and TEM. TEM imaging revealed spherical morphology, enabling the NPs to transport hydrophobic pan-HDACi drugs to PC-3 tumour sites and facilitate release through hydrolysis under acidic conditions. The NPs exhibited pH-hydrolysis characteristics, with enhanced drug release (61 ± 1.7%) at pH 6.2 compared to pH 7.4 (35 ± 0.8%). MTT assay confirmed antiproliferative effect. Analysis of FITC/(PNEG-b-P(Nor-PABA-C5)) cellular uptake showed increased absorption in prostate tumours. Live/dead cell assays showed loss of viability, with increased red fluorescence and morphological disruption at higher concentrations over 48 and 72 h.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Male; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Prostatic Neoplasms; Nanoparticles; Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors; Antineoplastic Agents; Polymers; Solubility; Cell Proliferation; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Molecular Structure; Norbornanes; Structure-Activity Relationship; Drug Design; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Particle Size; Cell Survival; Surface Properties