The study of nanostructured drug delivery systems allows the development of novel platforms for the efficient transport and controlled release of drug molecules in the harsh microenvironment of diseased tissues of living systems, thus offering a wide range of functional nanoplatforms for smart application in biotechnology and nanomedicine. This article highlights recent advances of smart nanocarriers composed of organic (including polymeric micelles and vesicles, liposomes, dendrimers, and hydrogels) and inorganic (including quantum dots, gold and mesoporous silica nanoparticles) materials. Despite the remarkable developments of recent synthetic methodologies, most of all nanocarriers’ action is associated with a number of unwanted side effects that diminish their efficient use in biotechnology and nanomedicine applications. This highlights some critical issues in the design and engineering of nanocarrier systems for biotechnology applications, arising from the complex environment and multiform interactions established within the specific biological media.
Amphiphiles are synthetic or natural molecules with the ability to self-assemble into a wide variety of structures including micelles, vesicles, nanotubes, nanofibers, and lamellae. Self-assembly processes of amphiphiles have been widely used to mimic biological systems, such as assembly of lipids and proteins, while their integrated actions allow the performance of highly specific cellular functions which has paved a way for bottom-up bionanotechnology. While amphiphiles self-assembly has attracted considerable attention for decades due to their extensive applications in material science, drug and gene delivery, recent developments in nanoscience stimulated the combination of the simple approaches of amphiphile assembly with the advanced concept of supramolecular self-assembly for the development of more complex, hierarchical nanostructures. Introduction of stimulus responsive supramolecular amphiphile assembly-disassembly processes provides particularly novel approaches for impacting bionanotechnology applications. Leading examples of these novel self-assembly processes can be found, in fact, in biosystems where assemblies of different amphiphilic macrocomponents and their integrated actions allow the performance of highly specific biological functions. In this perspective, we summarize in this tutorial review the basic concept and recent research on self-assembly of traditional amphiphilic molecules (such as surfactants, amphiphile-like polymers, or lipids) and more recent concepts of supramolecular amphiphiles assembly which have become increasingly important in emerging nanotechnology.
Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) experiments have been performed on large unilamellar liposomes prepared from 1,2-dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (DLPC), 1,2-dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and 1,2-distearoylphosphatidylcholine (DSPC) in heavy water by extrusion through polycarbonate filters with 500 A pores. The neutron scattering intensity I(Q) in the region of scattering vectors Q corresponding to 0.0015 A(-2) < or = Q(2) < or = 0.0115 A(-2) was fitted using a step function model of bilayer neutron scattering length density and supposing that the liposomes are spherical and have a Gaussian distribution of radii. Using the lipid volumetric data, and supposing that the thickness of bilayer polar region equals to d(H) = 9+/-1 A and the water molecular volume intercalated in the bilayer polar region is the same as in the aqueous bulk aqueous phase, the steric bilayer thickness d(L), the lipid surface area A(L) and the number of water molecules per lipid molecule N intercalated in the bilayer polar region were obtained: d(L) = 41.58+/-1.93 A, A(L) = 57.18+/-1.00 A(2) and N = 6.53+/-1.93 in DLPC at 20 degrees C, d(L) = 44.26+/-1.42 A, A(L) = 60.01+/-0.75 A(2) and N = 7.37+/-1.94 in DMPC at 36 degrees C, and d(L) = 49.77+/-1.52 A, A(L) = 64.78+/-0.46 A(2) and N = 8.67+/-1.97 in DSPC at 60 degrees C. After correcting for area thermal expansivity alpha approximately 0.00417 K(-1), the lipid surface area shows a decrease with the lipid acyl chain length at 60 degrees C: A(L) = 67.56+/-1.18 A(2) in DLPC, A(L) = 66.33+/-0.83 A(2) in DMPC and A(L) = 64.78+/-0.46 A(2) in DSPC. It is also shown that a joint evaluation of SANS and small-angle X-ray scattering on unilamellar liposomes can be used to obtain the value of d(H) and the distance of the lipid phosphate group from the bilayer hydrocarbon region d(H1).
Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) experiments were performed on unilamellar 1,2-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) vesicles prepared in heavy water by extrusion through polycarbonate filters with 500 A pores. The data obtained at 30+/-0.1 degrees C were evaluated using a five-strip function model of the bilayer coherent neutron scattering length density, three different approximate form factors describing scattering from vesicles, and different methods of evaluation of the experimental data. It is shown that the results obtained from the SANS data in the range of scattering vector values 0.0316 A(-1)< q<0.0775 A(-1) are not sensitive to the vesicle form factor, nor to the evaluation method. Using the hollow sphere model of vesicles convoluted with the Gaussian distribution of their sizes, a constrained bilayer polar region thickness of 9 A and a DMPC headgroup volume of 325.5 A(3), it was possible to obtain from the experimental data the DMPC surface area as 58.9+/-0.8 A(2), the bilayer thickness as 44.5+/-0.3 A and the number of water molecules as 6.8+/-0.2 per DMPC located in the bilayer polar region.
Liposomes are nano-sized spherical vesicles composed of an aqueous core surrounded by one (or more) phospholipid bilayer shells. Owing to their high biocompatibility, chemical composition variability, and ease of preparation, as well as their large variety of structural properties, liposomes have been employed in a large variety of nanomedicine and biomedical applications, including nanocarriers for drug delivery, in nutraceutical fields, for immunoassays, clinical diagnostics, tissue engineering, and theranostics formulations. Particularly important is the role of liposomes in drug-delivery applications, as they improve the performance of the encapsulated drugs, reducing side effects and toxicity by enhancing its in vitro- and in vivo-controlled delivery and activity. These applications stimulated a great effort for the scale-up of the formation processes in view of suitable industrial development. Despite the improvements of conventional approaches and the development of novel routes of liposome preparation, their intrinsic sensitivity to mechanical and chemical actions is responsible for some critical issues connected with a limited colloidal stability and reduced entrapment efficiency of cargo molecules. This article analyzes the main features of the formation and fabrication techniques of liposome nanocarriers, with a special focus on the structure, parameters, and the critical factors that influence the development of a suitable and stable formulation. Recent developments and new methods for liposome preparation are also discussed, with the objective of updating the reader and providing future directions for research and development.
In this paper we have investigated via x-ray diffraction the influence of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), known for its biological and therapeutic properties, on the structure of lipid membranes of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) in excess of the solvent (DMSO/water) at mole DMSO fractions XDMSO in (0.1) and under equilibrium conditions. At small XDMSO = 0.133 the repeat distance d is reduced remarkably, whereas wide-angle x-ray diffraction pattern remains almost unchanged with the increase in XDMSO. It agrees well with previous study (Yu and Quinn, 1995). At 0.133 < XDMSO < 0.3 the repeat period d reduces slowly; however, an orthorombic in-plane lattice of hydrocarbon chains transfers to a disordered quasihexagonal lattice. The increase in XDMSO from 0.3 up to approximately 0.9 leaves d almost unchanged, whereas it leads to less disordered packing of hydrocarbon chains. At XDMSO approximately 0.9, Lbeta' phase transfers into interdigitated phase. The chain-melting phase transition temperature of DPPC membranes increases by several degrees with the increase of DMSO concentration. It points to a strong concentration-dependent solvation of membrane surface by DMSO. Thus DMSO strongly interacts with the membrane surface, probably displacing water and modifying the structure of the lipid bilayer. It appears to determine some of the properties of DMSO as a biologically and therapeutically active substance.
The structure and hydration of a stratum corneum (SC) lipid model membrane composed of N-(alpha-hydroxyoctadecanoyl)-phytosphingosine (CER6)/cholesterol (Ch)/palmitic acid (PA)/cholesterol sulfate (ChS) were characterized by neutron diffraction. The neutron scattering length density across the SC lipid model membrane was calculated from measured diffraction peak intensities. The internal membrane structure and water distribution function across the bilayer were determined. The low hydration of the intermembrane space is a major feature of the SC lipid model membrane. The thickness of the water layer in the SC lipid model membrane is about 1 A at full hydration. For the composition 55% CER6/25% Ch/15% PA/5% ChS, in a partly dehydrated state (60% humidity) and at 32 degrees C, the lamellar repeat distance and the membrane thickness have the same value of 45.6 A . The hydrophobic region of the membrane has a thickness of 31.2 A . A decrease of the Ch content increases the membrane thickness. The water diffusion through the SC lipid model multilamellar membrane is a considerably slow process relative to that through phospholipid membranes. In excess water, the membrane hydration follows an exponential law with two characteristic times of 93 and 44 min. At 81 degrees C and 97% humidity, the membrane separates into two phases with repeat distances of 45.8 and 40.5 A . Possible conformations of CER6 molecules in the dry and hydrated multilayers are discussed.
The influence of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) on membrane thickness, multilamellar repeat distance, and phase transitions of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) was investigated by X-ray diffraction and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). The differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) study of water freezing and ice melting was performed in the ternary DPPC /DMSO /water and binary DMSO /water systems. The methods applied demonstrated the differences in membrane structure in three sub-regions of the DMSO mole fraction (X DMSO ): from 0.0 to 0.3 for the first, from 0.3 to 0.8 for the second, and from 0.9 to 1.0 for the third sub-region. The thickness of the intermembrane solvent at T =20 o C decreases from 14.4 ± 1.8 Å at X DMSO =0.0 to 7.8 ± 1.8 Å at X DMSO =0.1. The data were used to determine the number of free water molecules in the intermembrane space in the presence of DMSO. The results for 0.0 ≤ X DMSO ≤ 0.3 were explained in the framework of DMSO-induced dehydration of the intermembrane space.Keywords: dimethyl sulfoxide, cryoprotection, phospholipid, dehydration, scattering. Journal of Alloys and Compounds 286 (1999) 195-202 INTRODUCTIONDimethyl sulfoxide has two very important biological properties: a) ability to protect a variety of cells from the damaging effects of freezing and storage at a very low temperature, b) the modification of X-ray induced damage in cells and whole animals when DMSO is present before and during exposure to radiation [1].The main purpose of cryobiology is to find an "optimal" way of cooling biological systems to low temperatures (about the temperature of liquid nitrogen) and, at the same time, prevent the formation of ice inside the biological tissue. The mechanism of DMSO cryoprotection is still debated and, on the molecular level, it is not clear [2].DMSO makes hydrogen bonds with water molecules. The structure of the binary DMSO /water system has been studied by means of the spin-lattice relaxation and the chemical shift behavior of water and DMSO protons [3]. It was found that DMSO and water molecules tend to form hydrogen bonds in the relation 1/2 (mole DMSO fraction X DMSO = 0.33) or 1/3 (X DMSO = 0.25). The DMSO /water phase diagram is well known [4] and the phase behavior of the binary DPPC /water system has been investigated by calorimetry [5]. The influence of DMSO fraction on the pre-transition existence and on the repeat distance of the DPPC multilamellar structure has been studied for the region of a small DMSO mole fraction, X DMSO ≤ 0.13. From the calculation of the electron density profile, it was established that the intermembrane solvent space decreases with the increasing DMSO concentration [6].In the present paper, the influence of DMSO on 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) membranes was studied by X-ray diffraction, small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Our purpose was to obtain information on changes in the structure of DPPC in the presence of DMSO at T=20 o C ...
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