Yi
Yao
,
Jintao
Yang
,
Wen
Li
* and
Afang
Zhang
*
International Joint Laboratory of Biomimetic and Smart Polymers, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Shanghai University, Nanchen Street 333, Shanghai 200444, China. E-mail: wli@shu.edu.cn; azhang@shu.edu.cn
First published on 23rd August 2022
The crowding environment created by host polymers plays crucial roles in manipulating interactions with proteins and modulating their bioactivity. Here, we report our investigation on the interactions between polymers and proteins in the confined microenvironments constructed by oligoethylene glycol (OEG)-based dendronized polymers due to the crowded OEG dendrons. Several important characteristics of these dendronized polymers, including their aggregation state, charge state and combination form with biomolecules, were revealed to be the main factors decoding the polymer–protein interactions. To examine the effects of encapsulation and shielding from the dendronized polymers for the biomacromolecules, the guest proteins were combined through either bioconjugation, electrostatic complexation, or just physical mixing. The unprecedented thermoresponsiveness of the dendronized polymers provides tunable crowding and hydrophobicity of the microenvironment conveniently through their thermally induced aggregation, resulting in regulation of the activities for the proteins. This kind of dendronized polymer with structural and topological features is a promising candidate for the construction of intelligent artificial microenvironments to tunably confine biomacromolecules.
Macromolecules used for biological activity protection should have conformational freedom of the chains in aqueous solutions, like a randomly coiled coil, resulting in the formation of an energetically stable hydration shell wrapped around the proteins and hanging freely in the solution.13,18 For synthetic biomolecule stabilization agents, such as the widely used polyethylene glycols (PEGs),3 their suitable amphiphilicity has been found to be a key parameter that determines their states in aqueous solutions, dictating their activity protection capacity.18,19 PEG analogues are being continuously developed for achieving macromolecules with suitable amphiphilicity.20 Among them, one kind of comb-shaped polymer carrying oligoethylene glycol (OEG) pendants and a methacrylate backbone has attracted wide attention due to its adjustable amphiphilicity, which can be achieved through changing the chain length of the OEGs.7 Compared to their linear OEG counterparts, dendritic OEGs have more advantages in activity protection because of the multi-valency, topological cooperativity, and, most importantly, the densely packed dendritic OEG moieties providing a crowding effect in nanometre dimensions for efficient shielding.4,13,20,21
Recently, we found that OEG-based dendronized polymers exhibit unprecedented thermoresponsiveness, and have shown advantages in forming confined environments at molecular levels for activity protection of biomacromolecules through cooperation interactions and shielding effects.4,10,22 Herein, the interactions between dendronized polymers and proteins in aqueous solutions were investigated in detail. The OEG-based dendronized homopolymers (PG1), copolymers (PG1S), and dendronized chitosans (DCSs) were selected as the models to examine the confinement of proteins through physical mixing, covalent conjugation, or electrostatic complexation (Fig. 1). Moreover, the effects on the hydrophobic interactions between the dendronized polymers and the proteins during thermally induced aggregation of the polymers were revealed by various measurements. On this basis, the protein activity regulation capability of these dendronized polymers was explored under different conditions.
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Fig. 1 Schematic representation of the possible interaction modes between the dendronized polymers and proteins below, around, and above their cloud points (Tcps). |
Formation of copolymer–protein conjugates (PG1S-Mb) from PG1S and myoglobin (Mb) was followed by UV/vis measurement. The absorbance at 420 nm changed obviously after the addition of Mb to the solution of PG1S (Fig. S3A†). Moreover, the hydrodynamic radii (Rhs, intensity radii) increased twice after the addition of Mb to PG1S as shown in Fig. 2A. Both results prove that the conjugation of Mb to PG1S was successful. The loading ability of the polymers for proteins was further evaluated. The loading efficiency increased dramatically with the increase of the polymer concentration of PG1S, and exceeded 90% when the mass ratio of MSS to proteins was over 16 (Fig. 2B). Through isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) measurements, the binding stoichiometry (n) of dendritic OEGs per mole of Mb was found to be 35.5 and 5.2 for PG1 and DCS (Fig. S3B and S3C†), respectively.
The thermoresponsive behaviour of PG1, a physical mixture of PG1 and Mb (PG1/Mb), PG1S, bioconjugate PG1S-Mb, and complex (DCS/Mb) of DCS and Mb was investigated by UV/vis spectroscopy. All of the polymers or mixtures inherited the typical thermoresponsiveness from the OEG-based dendronized homopolymers, irrespective of the presence or absence of proteins, and their transmittance vs. temperature curves are shown in Fig. 2C. The Tcps are 32.6 °C for PG1, 32.5 °C for PG1/Mb, 31.5 °C for PG1S, 31.1 °C for PG1S-Mb, and 49.8 °C for DCS/Mb. PG1/Mb exhibited a similar Tcp to PG1, and only a slight change (less than 0.34 °C) was observed when the concentration of the proteins, including Mb, bovine serum albumin (BSA), and lysozyme (LYZ), increased from 0.05 to 0.25 mg mL−1 (Fig. S4A†). PG1S-Mb also showed nearly the same Tcp as its parent copolymer PG1S. Additionally, the Tcp of DCS/Mb has hardly changed when compared with DCS (49.6 °C, Fig. S4B†). However, DCS/Mb exhibited a relatively broad phase transition when compared to those from the dendronized polymethacrylates due to the stronger hydration. Aqueous solutions of the dendronized polymers became slightly turbid even at room temperature after the introduction of the proteins, as in the cases of PG1S-Mb and DCS/Mb. This suggests that the presence of proteins enhanced the intermolecular associations of the polymers to form aggregates, which forms an interesting feature that proteins can act as a “molecular glue” to induce aggregation of the host polymers through multi-valent interactions. The above suggests that either physical mixing, covalent conjugation, or electrostatic complexation of proteins had hardly any influence on the characteristic dehydration of the polymers carrying dense dendritic OEG pendants.26 This phenomenon is promising, suggesting that these polymers can host the proteins and retain their characteristic thermoresponsiveness. It's necessary to point out that the transmittance of the aqueous solution for both PG1S-Mb and DCS/Mb below its Tcp is lower than 80%, indicating that large and tight aggregates were already formed from the bioconjugate or complexes even at room temperature.
Possible protein-driven aggregation, as well as the thermally induced aggregation, was therefore investigated by dynamic light scattering (DLS) at different temperatures, and the results are plotted in Fig. 2D and S4C.† At room temperature, PG1S-Mb and DCS/Mb showed obvious aggregation below their Tcps with Rhs of 150 and 210 nm, respectively. The above indicates that the presence of proteins induces the aggregation of the dendronized polymers, and this aggregation was more pronounced in the cases of PG1S-Mb and DCS. Possible hydrophobic interactions between the dendritic OEGs and the proteins should have contributed to this aggregation, and covalent linkages in the case of PG1S-Mb or electrostatic interactions in the case of DCS should be helpful to enhance the wrapping of the polymer chains around the proteins.27 On the other hand, the multivalency of the proteins may have provided multiple sites to interact with and physically crosslink the dendronized polymers, resulting in very large aggregates. When the temperature increased above their Tcps, the Rh values of PG1 (20 to 280 nm), PG1S (50 to 330 nm), PG1/Mb (40 to 550 nm), DCS/Mb (210 to 850 nm), and PG1S-Mb (150 to 960 nm) all increased over 4 times. The sizes of the aggregates reached micrometre dimensions, and the latter two were more pronounced. In addition, the size distributions of the aggregates from PG1/protein (Fig. S5A†), PG1S-Mb, and DCS/Mb (Fig. S5B†) were small with narrower peaks at 25 °C, but their peak widths increased significantly above their Tcps. These results indicate that thermally induced dehydration of the dendronized polymers formed more hydrophobic domains, which enhanced the interconnection between the aggregates to form much larger mesoglobules. These hydrophobic domains could be helpful to protect proteins from high-temperature stress and the binding between the protein and substrate.28
Accordingly, we propose that the microconfinement formed through densely grafted dendritic OEGs provides a molecular envelope to impart the protein with a more hydrophobic microenvironment and cooperatively enhances hydrophobic interactions of the proteins with the polymers. To verify this conjecture, the hydrophobicity differences in the microenvironments for these polymers were examined by fluorescence measurements with ANS as a probe. The intensity at the maximum emission (530 nm) for ANS in the cases of PG1 and PG1S was over 10 times higher when compared to that of free proteins at temperatures both below or above their Tcps (Fig. S5C†), indicating that the dendronized polymers have provided the proteins with a more hydrophobic microenvironment.29
The quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation technique (QCM-D) was used to provide information on the adsorbed mass and the viscoelastic properties during the interactions between the dendronized polymers and the proteins at different temperatures.31 The gold chip was modified by the proteins before testing according to the method reported previously (Fig. S7A†).32 The frequency shift (Δf) for the adsorption process of PG1 took 5.3 h to reach equilibrium at 25 °C (Fig. 4A, red curve), but changed continuously at 38 °C (Fig. 4B, red curve). The adsorbed mass Δm (calculated according to Sauerbrey model and Δf) of PG1 on Mb at a given time (5.3 h) was 30.98 and 1971.71 ng cm−2 at 25 and 38 °C, respectively. The energy dissipation (ΔD) of PG1/Mb at 5.3 h was 0.461 × 10–6 at 25 °C (Fig. 4A, blue curve), which increased dramatically to 157.67 × 10−6 at 38 °C (Fig. 4B, blue curve). In addition, the Δf of DCS/Mb (at 42 min) was found to be −16.8 at 25 °C, which decreased to −31.2 Hz at 60 °C. The above results suggest that both PG1 and DCS show different affinities to the protein at temperatures below and above their Tcps, which remarkably influenced their interactions.33 The dendronized polymers adsorbed on the protein to form a relatively stiff layer with low dissipation capacity at temperatures below the Tcp (Fig. 4C). This is comparable to properties reported for OEG-alkanethiol self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on gold or silver surfaces.34–36 Differently, as the temperature increases above the Tcp, the adsorption layer of dendronized polymers on the protein showed viscoelastic and strongly dissipating properties, which are comparable to those of the widely studied PEG-based brush assemblies.31,37,38
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Fig. 5 Far-UV CD spectra of Mb from PG1/Mb (A) with different concentrations of polymer, and (B) at different temperatures (polymer/protein = 40, w/w). |
Possible effects of thermally induced aggregation of PG1 on the helical conformation of the proteins were further monitored. As shown in Fig. 5B, the intensities of the negative (near 210 nm) and positive (near 220 nm) Cotton effects from the CD spectra of PG1/Mb decreased with increase of the solution temperature. The spectra of PG1/protein (Fig. S8C and D†) were almost overlapping with those of the free protein when the temperature well exceeds (>40 °C) its Tcp. This is further evidence that thermally induced aggregation of the polymer changed the hydrophobic interactions between PG1 and Mb.39,42
The catalytic activity of Mb within the mixture was further investigated at different temperatures, and the results are shown in Fig. 6A. The activity of Mb from all samples increased linearly with the temperature between 25–45 °C from 30% to 61% for Mb, 40% to 73% for PG1/Mb, 42% to 79% for DCS/Mb, and 41% to 90% for PG1S-Mb, respectively. Compared to other groups, the activity of PG1S-Mb increased more obviously between 30–37 °C. For DCS/Mb, it increased obviously from 79% to nearly 100% between 45–60 °C. These temperatures correspond to their Tcps, indicating that around the phase transitions, the proteins exhibited the highest activities. However, the activity of the free proteins, PG1/Mb and PG1S-Mb decreased obviously to lower than 34% with further increase to 60 °C. We ascribe these abnormal increases of activity to the thermally induced dehydration of the dendritic OEGs from the polymers, which collapsed and aggregated to form hydrophobic microenvironments to enhance the hydrophobic interactions between the polymer and proteins. This leads to enhancement of the enveloping and shielding capability for the polymer chains towards Mb, simultaneously preventing the solvation of Mb, which is helpful to the binding of the proteins to the substrate. Moreover, the activity of the samples decreased at temperatures much higher than their Tcps. This should be due to the collapsing between the polymer chains, which caused the exposure of the active center of the proteins, eventually resulting in the loss of their activity.28 Differently, in the case of DCS/Mb, the effective electrostatic interactions between the CS mainchains and Mb was supportive of confinement on the proteins and regulation of their bioactivity. This complexation of the protein by DCS would make it benefit from the shielding effect from dendritic OEGs even at high temperature.
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Fig. 6 Quantitative relative activity of Mb from different samples at different temperatures (A), as well as after being kept at (B) 25 °C and (C) 60 °C for different time intervals. |
The bioactivity protection capability of the polymer was further explored at different temperatures for different time intervals. As shown in Fig. 6B, the activity for the free protein, PG1/Mb, PG1S-Mb, and DCS/Mb after being kept at 25 °C for 12 h was 41%, 42%, 76%, and 97%, respectively. Notably, the bioactivity of the protein in the cases of PG1S-Mb and DCS/Mb was almost two times higher than the other cases, indicating better protection capability of the protein. Furthermore, after being kept at 60 °C for 3.5 h, the bioactivity of the protein in the cases of free Mb and PG1/Mb only remained 6% and 11% (Fig. 6C), respectively, indicating significant loss of activity at elevated temperatures. In contrast, the bioactivity in the case of DCS/Mb was over 2 times that for PG1S-Mb at a high temperature, and was found to be 34% and 61% for PG1S-Mb and DCS/Mb, respectively. This indicates that the DCSs showed much better protection capability towards the protein at high temperature. This is understandable since the aggregated dendronized polymers provided a more hydrophobic and crowded microenvironment, which protected the proteins from strong solvation and was more suitable for proteins to maintain their high activities, especially at elevated temperatures.44,45 On the other hand, the effective electrostatic interactions between the CS mainchains and Mb form stable complexes, which should be favourable for Mb to compensate against solvation at high temperature.
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Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) measurements were carried out on a Waters GPC e2695 instrument with a 3 column set (Styragel HR3 + HR4 + HR5) equipped with a refractive index detector (Waters 2414), and DMF (containing 1 g L−1 LiBr) as eluent at 45 °C. The calibration was performed with poly(methyl methacrylate) standards in the range of Mp = 2580–981000 (Polymer Standards Service-USA Inc.).
UV/vis absorption spectra (between 350 and 450 nm) and turbidity measurements were performed on a JASCO V750 UV/vis spectrophotometer with a thermo-controlled bath. Polymer solutions were placed in the spectrophotometer (path length 1 cm) under the heating or cooling rate of 0.2 °C min−1. Tcp is determined at which the transmittance had reached 50% of its initial value at λ = 700 nm. The concentration of the polymer is 2.5 mg mL−1. The samples were all prepared in buffer solution (PBS, pH 7.0, 50 mM).
DLS measurements were performed on DynaPro Nanostar (Wyatt Technology Corporation). The solutions of the polymers and their mixtures with proteins were placed under the heating or cooling rate of 0.2 °C min−1. All Rhs were calculated according to the intensity.
Fluorescence experiments were carried out on a Horiba Jobin Yvon FluorologR-3 with FluorEssence. The spectra of all samples were obtained with the addition of ANS (30 μM) at the excitation conditions of 350 nm and emission was scanned between 410 and 650 nm with a 4 nm band-pass of the excitation and emission slits.
FT-IR spectra were recorded using a Nicolet Is50 spectrophotometer with a diamond/ZnSe universal ATR sampling accessory. The spectra of all samples in deuteroxide were obtained in transmission mode from 400–4000 cm−1 at a resolution of 4 cm−1 averaging 64 scans. All samples were prepared in D2O.
CD spectra were recorded in the far-UV region using a JASCO-815 spectrometer (Jasco, Japan). The CD spectra were obtained in the range between 190 and 290 nm. Quartz 0.5 cm path length cells were used for all CD experiments. The recording parameters were: scan speed 200 nm min−1, response time 4 s, slit width 1 mmol L−1, bandwidth 4.0 nm, and step resolution 0.2 nm. From 3 to 6 scans were run for each sample.
QCM-D measurements were carried out on a Q-Sense E4 (Q-Sense, Sweden) equipped with a multichannel pump (IPC Ismatec SA, Switzerland). The grafting of protein to the gold cells (5 MHz) was performed according to the method reported previously.31 Firstly, the bare gold surface was exposed to a DMSO solution of 2 mg mL−1 DTSP. DTSP forms SAMs spontaneously through covalent interactions between the sulfur group and the metal surface. Then, the surface was rinsed with pure DMSO several times and dried in a nitrogen stream. In the next step, the gold cells with SAMs was immersed in a PBS solution of Mb (10 mL, 0.1 mg L−1) in an ice bath for 6 h. The gold cells were further purified by deionized water several times. Subsequently, the cells were installed into their corresponding channels. The PBS (for the acquisition of the base line) and dendronized polymers were injected successively, and the changes of Δf and ΔD were recorded over time. The changes of the resonance frequency (Δf) of the crystal reflect the adsorbed mass, while the energy dissipation (ΔD) provides information on the viscoelastic properties of the adsorbed layer.31 Δm = C × Δf, where Δm = adsorbed mass [ng cm−2], C = −17.7 ng (cm2 Hz)−1.
ITC measurements were performed on an isothermal titration calorimeter (TA instruments, TAM IV), to evaluate the thermodynamics of the binding process between the samples and Mb aqueous solutions. The instrument was calibrated electrically with a precision better than (±0.1%). The PG1 or DCS in the syringes was titrated into the solutions containing myoglobin. The titrating solution was automatically added in aliquots of 4.974 μL with a 30 min interval between each injection, and the system was stirred at 60 rpm with a gold propeller. Each experiment was repeated at least 3 times, and the heat evolved per injection was integrated using the software especially designed for TAM IV. The data was analysed using the ITC software with the “independent” model and Boltzmann formula y = A2 + (A1 − A2)/(1 + exp((x − x0)/dx)) was used for curve fitting.
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Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2py00957a |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |