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Liposomes for Topical Use: A Physico-Chemical Comparison of Vesicles Prepared from Egg or Soy Lecithin

Developments in nanotechnology and in the formulation of liposomal systems provide the opportunity for cosmetic dermatology to design novel delivery systems. Determination of their physico-chemical parameters has importance when developing a nano-delivery system. The present study highlights some te...

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Autores principales: Budai, Lívia, Kaszás, Nóra, Gróf, Pál, Lenti, Katalin, Maghami, Katayoon, Antal, István, Klebovich, Imre, Petrikovics, Ilona, Budai, Marianna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Österreichische Apotheker-Verlagsgesellschaft 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3867246/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24482779
http://dx.doi.org/10.3797/scipharm.1305-11
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author Budai, Lívia
Kaszás, Nóra
Gróf, Pál
Lenti, Katalin
Maghami, Katayoon
Antal, István
Klebovich, Imre
Petrikovics, Ilona
Budai, Marianna
author_facet Budai, Lívia
Kaszás, Nóra
Gróf, Pál
Lenti, Katalin
Maghami, Katayoon
Antal, István
Klebovich, Imre
Petrikovics, Ilona
Budai, Marianna
author_sort Budai, Lívia
collection PubMed
description Developments in nanotechnology and in the formulation of liposomal systems provide the opportunity for cosmetic dermatology to design novel delivery systems. Determination of their physico-chemical parameters has importance when developing a nano-delivery system. The present study highlights some technological aspects/characteristics of liposomes formulated from egg or soy lecithins for topical use. Alterations in the pH, viscosity, surface tension, and microscopic/macroscopic appearance of these vesicular systems were investigated. The chemical composition of the two types of lecithin was checked by mass spectrometry. Caffeine, as a model molecule, was encapsulated into multilamellar vesicles prepared from the two types of lecithin: then zeta potential, membrane fluidity, and encapsulation efficiency were compared. According to our observations, samples prepared from the two lecithins altered the pH in opposite directions: egg lecithin increased it while soy lecithin decreased it with increased lipid concentration. Our EPR spectroscopic results showed that the binding of caffeine did not change the membrane fluidity in the temperature range of possible topical use (measured between 2 and 50 °C). Combining our results on encapsulation efficiency for caffeine (about 30% for both lecithins) with those on membrane fluidity data, we concluded that the interaction of caffeine with the liposomal membrane does not change the rotational motion of the lipid molecules close to the head group region. In conclusion, topical use of egg lecithin for liposomal formulations can be preferred if there are no differences in the physico-chemical properties due to the encapsulated drugs, because the physiological effects of egg lecithin vesicles on skin are significantly better than that of soy lecithin liposomes.
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spelling pubmed-38672462014-01-30 Liposomes for Topical Use: A Physico-Chemical Comparison of Vesicles Prepared from Egg or Soy Lecithin Budai, Lívia Kaszás, Nóra Gróf, Pál Lenti, Katalin Maghami, Katayoon Antal, István Klebovich, Imre Petrikovics, Ilona Budai, Marianna Sci Pharm Research Article Developments in nanotechnology and in the formulation of liposomal systems provide the opportunity for cosmetic dermatology to design novel delivery systems. Determination of their physico-chemical parameters has importance when developing a nano-delivery system. The present study highlights some technological aspects/characteristics of liposomes formulated from egg or soy lecithins for topical use. Alterations in the pH, viscosity, surface tension, and microscopic/macroscopic appearance of these vesicular systems were investigated. The chemical composition of the two types of lecithin was checked by mass spectrometry. Caffeine, as a model molecule, was encapsulated into multilamellar vesicles prepared from the two types of lecithin: then zeta potential, membrane fluidity, and encapsulation efficiency were compared. According to our observations, samples prepared from the two lecithins altered the pH in opposite directions: egg lecithin increased it while soy lecithin decreased it with increased lipid concentration. Our EPR spectroscopic results showed that the binding of caffeine did not change the membrane fluidity in the temperature range of possible topical use (measured between 2 and 50 °C). Combining our results on encapsulation efficiency for caffeine (about 30% for both lecithins) with those on membrane fluidity data, we concluded that the interaction of caffeine with the liposomal membrane does not change the rotational motion of the lipid molecules close to the head group region. In conclusion, topical use of egg lecithin for liposomal formulations can be preferred if there are no differences in the physico-chemical properties due to the encapsulated drugs, because the physiological effects of egg lecithin vesicles on skin are significantly better than that of soy lecithin liposomes. Österreichische Apotheker-Verlagsgesellschaft 2013 2013-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3867246/ /pubmed/24482779 http://dx.doi.org/10.3797/scipharm.1305-11 Text en © Budai et al.; licensee Österreichische Apotheker-Verlagsgesellschaft m. b. H., Vienna, Austria. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Budai, Lívia
Kaszás, Nóra
Gróf, Pál
Lenti, Katalin
Maghami, Katayoon
Antal, István
Klebovich, Imre
Petrikovics, Ilona
Budai, Marianna
Liposomes for Topical Use: A Physico-Chemical Comparison of Vesicles Prepared from Egg or Soy Lecithin
title Liposomes for Topical Use: A Physico-Chemical Comparison of Vesicles Prepared from Egg or Soy Lecithin
title_full Liposomes for Topical Use: A Physico-Chemical Comparison of Vesicles Prepared from Egg or Soy Lecithin
title_fullStr Liposomes for Topical Use: A Physico-Chemical Comparison of Vesicles Prepared from Egg or Soy Lecithin
title_full_unstemmed Liposomes for Topical Use: A Physico-Chemical Comparison of Vesicles Prepared from Egg or Soy Lecithin
title_short Liposomes for Topical Use: A Physico-Chemical Comparison of Vesicles Prepared from Egg or Soy Lecithin
title_sort liposomes for topical use: a physico-chemical comparison of vesicles prepared from egg or soy lecithin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3867246/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24482779
http://dx.doi.org/10.3797/scipharm.1305-11
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