Foster Jeffrey C, Carrazzone Ryan J, Spear Nathan J, Radzinski Scott C, Arrington Kyle J, Matson John B
Department of Chemistry, Center for Drug Discovery, and Macromolecules Innovation Institute, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, 24061, United States.
Macromolecules. 2019 Feb 12;52(3):1104-1111. doi: 10.1021/acs.macromol.8b02315. Epub 2019 Jan 28.
Drug delivery from polymer micelles has been widely studied, but methods to precisely tune rates of drug release from micelles are limited. Here, the mobility of hydrophobic micelle cores was varied to tune the rate at which a covalently bound drug was released. This concept was applied to cysteine-triggered release of hydrogen sulfide (HS), a signaling gas with therapeutic potential. In this system, thiol-triggered HS donor molecules were covalently linked to the hydrophobic blocks of self-assembled polymer amphiphiles. Because release of HS is triggered by cysteine, diffusion of cysteine into the hydrophobic micelle core was hypothesized to control the rate of release. We confirmed this hypothesis by carrying out release experiments from HS-releasing micelles in varying compositions of EtOH/HO. Higher EtOH concentrations caused the micelles to swell, facilitating diffusion in and out of their hydrophobic cores and leading to faster HS release from the micelles. To achieve a similar effect without addition of organic solvent, we prepared micelles with varying core mobility via incorporation of a plasticizing co-monomer in the core-forming block. The glass transition temperature (T) of the core block could therefore be precisely varied by changing the amount of the plasticizing co-monomer in the polymer. In aqueous solution under identical conditions, the release rate of HS varied over 20-fold (t = 0.18 - 4.2 h), with the lowest T hydrophobic block resulting in the fastest HS release. This method of modulating release kinetics from polymer micelles by tuning core mobility may be applicable to many types of physically encapsulated and covalently linked small molecules in a variety of drug delivery systems.
聚合物胶束的药物递送已得到广泛研究,但精确调节胶束药物释放速率的方法却很有限。在此,通过改变疏水胶束核的流动性来调节共价结合药物的释放速率。这一概念被应用于半胱氨酸触发的硫化氢(HS)释放,硫化氢是一种具有治疗潜力的信号气体。在该系统中,硫醇触发的HS供体分子与自组装聚合物两亲物的疏水嵌段共价连接。由于HS的释放由半胱氨酸触发,因此推测半胱氨酸扩散到疏水胶束核中可控制释放速率。我们通过在不同组成的乙醇/水体系中对释放HS的胶束进行释放实验,证实了这一假设。较高的乙醇浓度会使胶束膨胀,便于其在疏水核内外扩散,从而导致胶束释放HS的速度更快。为了在不添加有机溶剂的情况下达到类似效果,我们通过在形成核的嵌段中引入增塑共聚单体,制备了具有不同核流动性的胶束。因此,通过改变聚合物中增塑共聚单体的量,可以精确改变核嵌段的玻璃化转变温度(Tg)。在相同条件下的水溶液中,HS的释放速率变化超过20倍(t1/2 = 0.18 - 4.2小时),Tg最低的疏水嵌段导致HS释放最快。这种通过调节核流动性来调控聚合物胶束释放动力学的方法,可能适用于多种药物递送系统中许多类型的物理包裹和共价连接的小分子。