Abstract

To evaluate the feasibility of transmucosal delivery of methionine enkephalin (Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met; Met-Enk), it is important to first investigate its physicochemical and enzymatic stability. The kinetics of degradation of Met-Enk in aqueous solution was determined at pH 2.01-9.84 and 37-45 degrees C by high-performance liquid chromatography. The first-order rate constant (k) was calculated, and the log k-pH profile showed that Met-Enk is most stable at pH approximately 5.0. Various mucosae excised from rabbit were mounted on Valia-Chien permeation cells and exposed to isotonic phosphate buffer at physiologic pHs. Mucosal and serosal extracts were collected from the donor and receptor solutions, respectively. The degradation of Met-Enk in the extracts followed first-order kinetics, but no significant difference in the degradation rates was observed between mucosal and serosal extracts, regardless of the type of mucosa used. Degradation was most rapid in the extracts of rectal mucosa, followed by vaginal and nasal mucosae. The major metabolites were Des-Tyr-Met-Enk and Tyrosine (Tyr), indicating the enzymatic hydrolysis by aminopeptidases. However, the data also suggested that dipeptidyl peptidase and dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase could play some roles in the degradation of Met-Enk. The degradation pathways of Met-Enk were further explored by concomitantly determining the formation of smaller metabolites of primary hydrolytic fragments of Met-Enk in the mucosal extracts.

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