Methods and compositions for producing lipid-based cubic phase nanoparticles were first discovered in the 1990s. Since then a number of studies have been presented, but little is known about how to control key properties such as particle size, morphology, and stability of cubic phase dispersions. In the present work we give examples of how these properties can be tuned by composition and processing conditions. Importantly we show that stable particle dispersions with consistent size and structure can be produced by a simple processing scheme comprising a homogenization and heat treatment step.
A unique set of nanoparticle dispersions of self-assembled lipid mesophases with distinctive reversed cubic, hexagonal, and sponge phase structures has been prepared by use of original lipid combinations and a simple, generally applicable and scalable method. All key properties, particle size distributions, shape, phase structure, and stability, are controlled predictably and reproducibly. The results suggest the cross-disciplinary use of nonlamellar particle structures in science and technology as, for instance, biomimetics, in vivo drug delivery vehicles for diagnostic and therapeutic agents, protein crystallization matrices, and soft nanoporous materials.
Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) decorated lipid bilayers are widely used in biomembrane and pharmaceutical research. The success of PEG-lipid stabilized liposomes in drug delivery is one of the key factors for the interest in these polymer/lipid systems. From a more fundamental point of view, it is essential to understand the effect of the surface grafted polymers on the physical-chemical properties of the lipid bilayer. Herein we have used cryo-transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering to characterize the aggregate structure and phase behavior of mixtures of PEG-lipids and distearoylphosphatidylcholine or dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. The PEG-lipids contain PEG of molecular weight 2000 or 5000. We show that the transition from a dispersed lamellar phase (liposomes) to a micellar phase consisting of small spherical micelles occurs via the formation of small discoidal micelles. The onset of disk formation already takes place at low PEG-lipid concentrations (<5 mol %) and the size of the disks decreases as more PEG-lipid is added to the lipid mixture. We show that the results from cryo-transmission electron microscopy correlate well with those obtained from dynamic light scattering and that the disks are well described by an ideal disk model. Increasing the temperature, from 25 degrees C to above the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition temperature for the respective lipid mixtures, has a relatively small effect on the aggregate structure.
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