R. Duncan, H. Cable, John B. Lloyd
Oct 1, 1983
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Journal
Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics
Abstract
N-(2-Hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide copolymers are considered to be a potential drug delivery system. To fulfil this role the drug-polymer linkage must be susceptible to intralysosomal hydrolysis. Taking p-nitroanilide as a drug analogue, copolymers were synthesized bearing oligopeptidyl-p-nitroanilide side-chains designed to match known specificities of the lysosomal enzymes cathepsin L or cathepsin D. Degradation of side-chains by rat liver lysosomal enzymes (measured by monitoring terminal p-nitroaniline release) occurred only in the presence of reduced glutathione (5 mmol/l) and was effectively inhibited by leupeptin, indicating the involvement of thiol-proteinases in every case. Depending on side-chain composition, between 20 and more than 50% of the terminal p-nitroaniline residues were liberated during a 5 h incubation. It has also been shown that 1) a polymer molecule may contain side-chains of a single type that are nevertheless differentially susceptible to lysosomal hydrolysis; 2) two of the side-chains studied liberate only a p-nitroaniline residue, whereas the others also release amino-acyl-p-nitroanilides; 3) the cleavage of all side-chains displays a broad pH optimum pH 5 to pH 7; 4) the Michaelis-Menten constant Km for side-chain cleavage varied between 26,1 and 143,2 mg/ml, depending on the amino acid sequence of the side-chain.