Abstract

Hydrophobic ion pairing (HIP) is a drug encapsulation technology that uses electrostatic interactions between a drug and an additive. However, although polymeric micelles can encapsulate hydrophobic drugs in the core, the encapsulated drug often leaks. Therefore, we designed polymeric micelles with HIP functionalized in a hydrophobic inner core using three diblock copolymers comprising polypeptides with different ratios of polar and hydrophobic amino acids and polyethylene glycol (PEG) to encapsulate indomethacin (IND). The three IND-encapsulated HIP micelles showed different area under the curve (AUC) values as an index of blood retention after intravenous injection in mice. Despite having the same PEG shell, IND-PEG-poly(H/F)n showed a 1.56-fold higher AUC than IND-PEG-poly(D/F)n. PEG interface morphologies were evaluated to determine the differences in pharmacokinetic parameters caused by changes in inner core HIP patterns. The micellarized diblock copolymer was desorbed from IND-PEG-poly(D/F)n due to electrostatic repulsion between IND and the diblock copolymer comprising aspartic acid. Our results suggest that changes in the HIP patterns of the micelle inner core affected the PEG interface morphologies, such as PEG density and diblock copolymer desorption from micelles. These phenomena might lead to changes in the interaction of plasma proteins and drug dispositions.

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