Artigo Revisado por pares

Poly(l-histidine)–PEG block copolymer micelles and pH-induced destabilization

2003; Elsevier BV; Volume: 90; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0168-3659(03)00205-0

ISSN

1873-4995

Autores

Eun Seong Lee, Hyun Joon Shin, Kun Na, You Han Bae,

Tópico(s)

Polymer Surface Interaction Studies

Resumo

Poly(L-histidine)-poly(ethylene glycol) diblock copolymers (polyHis-b-PEG) were prepared and used for the construction of polymeric micelles responding to local pH changes in the body. PolyHis was synthesized by ring opening polymerization of L-histidine N-carboxyanhydride, the imidazole amine group of which was protected by the dinitrophenyl group. The resulting polymer (M(n): 5,000 g/mole) was coupled to poly(ethylene glycol) (M(n): 2,000 g/mole) via an amide linkage using the dicyclohexyl carbodiimide and N-hydroxysuccinimide-mediated reaction. The block copolymer in dimethyl sulfoxide formed polymeric micelles on diafiltration against a borate buffer at pH 8. Dynamic light scattering and atomic force microscopy showed the micelles were spherical, diameter approximately 114 nm, with a unimodal distribution. The critical micelle concentration (CMC) at pH 8.0 was 2.3 mg/l. The CMC increased markedly on decreasing the pH of the diafiltration medium below 7.2. Micelles prepared at pH 8.0 were gradually destabilized below pH 7.4, as evidenced by a slight increase in light transmittance, an alteration in size distribution, and a decrease in the pyrene fluorescence intensity. It was concluded that the ionization of the polyHis block forming the micelle core determined the pH-dependent CMC and stability. After further optimization of the pH-sensitivity, pH-sensitive micelles are expected to have application for solid tumor treatment, exploiting the fact that most solid tumors have an acidic extracellular pH.

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