The effect of cholate on solubilisation and permeability of simple and protein-loaded phosphatidylcholine/sodium cholate mixed aggregates designed to mediate transdermal delivery of macromolecules.

Autor: Simões SI; UNFAB, Departamento de Biotecnologia, INETI, Lisboa, Portugal, EU., Marques CM, Cruz ME, Cevc G, Martins MB
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: European journal of pharmaceutics and biopharmaceutics : official journal of Arbeitsgemeinschaft fur Pharmazeutische Verfahrenstechnik e.V [Eur J Pharm Biopharm] 2004 Nov; Vol. 58 (3), pp. 509-19.
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejpb.2004.05.010
Abstrakt: Carriers for non-invasive administration of biologically important antioxidant enzymes Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) were developed. Solubilisation and permeabilities of various soybean phosphatidylcholine/sodium cholate (SPC/NaChol) mixtures, mainly in the form of lipid bilayers, focussing on system properties relevant for non-invasive enzyme delivery were investigated in this work. Static and dynamic light scattering measurements gave information on the behaviour of the systems containing up to 40 mM NaChol and 30.6-1.2 mM SPC in the final suspension. The average size of such mixed aggregates was in the 100-200 nm range. Suspension turbidity decreased by 50% upon increasing nominal molar detergent/lipid ratio to NaChol/SPC = 7 and 1.25, in case of SPC = 1.2 and 19.6 mM, respectively. The effective NaChol/SPC molar ratio in bilayers saturated with the detergent was found to be: R(e)(sat) = 0.70 +/- 0.01; bilayer solubilisation point corresponded to R(e)(sol) = 0.97 +/- 0.02, independently of enzyme loading. Vesicles became very permeable to SOD when membrane bound NaChol concentration exceeded 13.7 mM, in case of total starting lipid concentration of 138 mM diluted to SPC = 19.6 mM. Specifically, we measured a 50% loss of SOD from the vesicles with an aggregate-associated molar detergent ratio NaChol/SPC approximately 0.7, which is near the saturation but well below the solubilisation limit. Calcein efflux from such vesicles was compared with SPC/NaChol/SOD mixed aggregates. Our results should contribute to the future design of vesicle mediated transdermal delivery of antioxidant enzymes.
Databáze: MEDLINE