The development of artificial surfactants for the treatment of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) requires lipid systems that can spread rapidly from solution to the air-water interface. Because hydration-repulsion forces stabilize liposomal bilayers and oppose spreading, liposome systems that undergo geometric rearrangement from the bilayer (lamellar) phase to the hexagonal II (HII) phase could hasten lipid transfer to the air-water interface through unstable transition intermediates. A liposome system containing dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine was designed; the system is stable at 23 degrees C but undergoes transformation to the HII phase as the temperature increases to 37 degrees C. The spreading of lipid from this system to the air-water interface was rapid at 37 degrees C but slow at 23 degrees C. When tested in vivo in a neonatal rabbit model, such systems elicited an onset of action equal to that of native human surfactant. These findings suggest that lipid polymorphic phase behavior may have a crucial role in the effective functioning of pulmonary surfactant.
Incorporation of N-(omega-carboxy)acylamido-phosphatidylethanolamines (-PEs) into large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) of L-alpha-distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC) was found to dramatically increase the in vivo liposomal circulation lifetime in rats, reaching a maximal effect at 10 mol.% of the total phospholipid. Neither pure DSPC liposomes nor those with the longest circulating derivative, N-glutaryl-dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine (-DPPE), were found to significantly bind complement from serum. Therefore, the relatively short circulation time of pure DSPC liposomes did not appear to be related to greater complement opsonization leading to uptake by the reticuloendothelial system. However, N-(omega-carboxy)acylamido-PEs were particularly efficient inhibitors of a limited aggregation detected for pure DSPC liposomes. The aggregation tendency of DSPC liposomes incorporating various structural analogs of N-glutaryl-DPPE correlated inversely with the circulation lifetimes. Therefore, it is concluded that such PE derivatives enhance the circulation time by preventing liposomal aggregation and avoiding a poorly understood mechanism of clearance that is dependent on size but is independent of complement opsonization. At high concentrations of N-glutaryl-DPPE (above 10 mol.%), the liposomes exhibited strong complement opsonization and were cleared from circulation rapidly, as were other highly negatively charged liposomes. These data demonstrate that both the lack of opsonization and the lack of a tendency to aggregate are required for long circulation. Liposomal disaggregation via N-(omega-carboxy)acylamido-PEs yields a new class of large unilamellar DSPC liposomes with circulation lifetimes that are comparable to those of sterically stabilized liposomes.
SYNOPSISA new method is presented for controlling the rate of antibody ( Ab) release from a n inert matrix composed of poly (ethylene-co-vinyl acetate) ( EVAc) , a biocompatible polymer that is frequently used to achieve controlled release. Using supercritical propane, a parent EVAc sample ( M , = 70 kDa, M , / M , = 2.4) was separated into narrow fractions with a range of molecular weights (8.7 < M , < 165 kDa, 1.4 < M,,,/M, < 1.7). Solid particles of Ab were dispersed in matrices composed of different polymer fractions and the rate of Ab release into buffered saline was measured. The rate of Ab release from the EVAc matrix depended on molecular weight: > 90% of the incorporated Ab was released from low molecular weight fractions ( M , < 40 kDa) during the first 5 days of release, while < 10% was released from the high molecular weight fraction ( M , > 160 kDa) during 14 days of release. No significant differences in polymer composition, glass-transition temperature, or crystallinity were identified in the different molecular weight fractions of EVAc. Mechanical properties of the polymer did depend on the molecular weight distribution, and correlated directly with Ab release rates. Because it permits rapid and reproducible fractionation of polymers, supercritical fluid extraction can be used to modify the performance of polymeric biomaterials. 0 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
We have studied the release of nerve growth factor (NGF), a protein under consideration for treatment of Alzheimer's Disease, from polymer matrices and microspheres to characterize the stability of NGF, the dynamics of NGF release, and the distribution of NGF within the brain interstitium. Poly(ethylene-co-vinyl acetate) (EVAc) disks and poly(L-lactic acid) (PLA) microspheres were formed by codispersing NGF with one of a variety of molecules. The mass of mouse NGF (mNGF) detected following release from EVAc disks into buffered saline varied five-fold over the range of codispersants studied, with carboxymethyldextran providing optimal release, while the mass of recombinant human NGF (rhNGF) released varied four-fold from both EVAc disks and PLA microspheres, with albumin and carboxymethyldextran providing optimal release. Variation of the codispersant species significantly affected NGF release into buffered saline; it also had a noticeable, but small, effect of the amount of NGF found in the brain tissue following implantation of a polymer device. To improve NGF retention in tissue, NGF was conjugated to 70 000 molecular weight dextran and incorporated into a polymeric device. The distribution of NGF was enhanced by conjugation; comparison of NGF concentrations in the brain to a mathematical model of diffusion and elimination suggested that the elimination rate of NGF-dextran conjugate in the tissue was over seven times slower than the elimination rate of NGF. These results indicate that variation of the properties of the controlled release system may be useful in regulating the time course of NGF delivery to tissue, and that modification of the NGF itself can improve penetration and retention in the brain.
Because the therapeutic use of the antitumor ether lipid 1-O-octadecyl-2-O-methyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine (ET-18-OCH3) is restricted by its hemolytic activity we explored the use of lipid packing parameters to reduce this toxicity by creating structurally optimized ET-18-OCH3 liposomes. We postulated that combination of ET-18-OCH3, which is similar in structure to lysophosphatidylcholine, with lipid molecules of complementary molecular shape (opposite headgroup/chain volume) would likely yield a stable lamellar phase from which ET-18-OCH3 exchange to red blood cell membranes would be curtailed. To quantitate the degree of shape complementarity, we used a Langmuir trough and measured the mean molecular area per molecule (MMAM) for monolayers comprised of ET-18-OCH3, the host lipids, and binary mixtures of varying mole percentage ET-18-OCH3. The degree of complementarity was taken as the reduction in MMAM from the value expected based on simple additivity of the individual components. The greatest degree of shape complementarity was observed with cholesterol: the order of complementarity for the ET-18-OCH3-lipid mixtures examined was cholesterol >> DOPE > POPC approximately DOPC. Phosphorus NMR and TLC analysis of aqueous suspensions of ET-18-OCH3 (40 mol%) with the host lipids revealed them to all be lamellar phase. For ET-18-OCH3 at 40 mol% in liposomes, the hemolytic activity followed the trend of the reduction in MMAM and was least for the ET-18-OCH3/cholesterol system (H50 = 661 microM ET-18-OCH3) followed by ET-18-OCH3/DOPE (H50 = 91 microM) and mixtures with POPC and DOPC which were comparable at H50 = 26 microM and 38 microM, respectively: the H50 concentration for free ET-18-OCH3 was 16 microM. This experimental strategy for designing optimized liposomes with a reduction in exchange, and hence toxicity, may be useful for other amphipathic/lipophilic drugs that are dimensionally compatible with lipid bilayers.
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