Macromolecular Rapid Communications, Vol.37, No.18, 1499-1506, 2016
pH-Triggered Sustained Drug Delivery from a Polymer Micelle having the beta-Thiopropionate Linkage
The synthesis, micellar aggregation, and pH-triggered intracellular drug delivery ability of an amphiphilic statistical copolymer (P2) are studied. Two methacrylate derivatives, one containing a hydrophilic pendant and the other containing a hydrophobic pendant chain, are copolymerized to produce P2. The hydrophobic pendant chain is linked to the polymer backbone by a beta-thiopropionate linkage, known to undergo slow hydrolysis at mild acidic pH. P2 forms a multimicellar cluster in water with a critical aggregation concentration of 0.02 mg mL(-1) and encapsulates a hydrophobic guest such as pyrene, Nile red, or the anti-cancer drug doxorubicin (Dox). Sustained release of the entrapped Dox (80% after 100 h) is noticed at pH 5.2, while release is significantly slower (35% after 100 h) at pH 7.4. Acidic hydrolysis of the beta-thiopropionate linkage leading to the reduction of the hydrophobicity is established as the cause for micellar disassembly and triggered drug release. Cell-culture studies with the human breast cancer cell line, MCF-7, reveal biocompatibility of P2 (below 150 mu g mL(-1)). It is further tested for intracellular delivery of Dox. MCF-7 cells remain healthy at pH 7.4 but become unhealthy at pH 5.2 when treated with a Dox-loaded P2 micelles.
Keywords:amphiphilic polymers;beta-thiopropionate linkages;doxorubicin;drug delivery;pH-responsive micelles