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doctoral thesis

Single-Chain Nanoparticles for Intracellular Drug Delivery

Liao, Suiyang  
2022

Single-chain nanoparticles (SCNPs) are a type of polymeric nanoparticles formed by collapsing/folding individual polymer chains via intra-molecular interactions. Their emergence holds promise to construct sub-20 nm polymeric nanoparticles with defined structure. Challenges remain for controllable construction of SCNPs. First, soft nanostructures like SCNPs are prone to deformation and cannot be well represented by geometrical terms such as size and shape; instead, a topological description is more proper. Second, SCNP formation by stochastic pairing of the functionalities from the same linear precursor leads to stochastic outcomes. Versatile synthetic approaches as well as novel analytical tools are needed to gain control on the SCNP topologies. Third, it remains an open question how SCNPs' topology affects their properties, such as their interaction with cells. This thesis investigates SCNP folding and their interaction with cells from the topological point of view. We first show that the SCNP topology can be tuned. The effect from two key factors (the initial chain conformation and the length of the cross-linkers) on the formation of SCNPs were experimentally investigated. A suite of analytical tools was developed and applied to characterize the SCNP topology, which was then correlated to SCNPs' cytotoxicity profile. We then show that cellular uptake discriminates SCNP topological isomers. SCNPs cross-linked with disulfide bonds were transformed into topological isomers by reshuffling the disulfide pairs. The nuances of different topologies were captured by the unparallel sensitivity of analytical ultracentrifugation. The glucocorticoid induced GFP translocation assays showed that the SCNPs' topology was essential for their ability to access the cytosol. The overall work presented in the thesis provides new perspectives on SCNPs' formation, characterization, and interaction with cells from the topological point of view.

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Type
doctoral thesis
DOI
10.5075/epfl-thesis-9080
Author(s)
Liao, Suiyang  
Advisors
Stellacci, Francesco  
Jury

Prof. Vivek Subramanian (président) ; Prof. Francesco Stellacci (directeur de thèse) ; Prof. Athina Anastasaki, Prof. Darrell Irvine, Prof. Egbert Meijer (rapporteurs)

Date Issued

2022

Publisher

EPFL

Publisher place

Lausanne

Public defense year

2022-04-08

Thesis number

9080

Total of pages

153

Subjects

SCNPs; topology; topological isomer; topological defects; characterization; drug delivery

EPFL units
SUNMIL  
Faculty
STI  
School
IMX  
Doctoral School
EDMX  
Available on Infoscience
March 22, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/186523
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