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Nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles

The formulation of drug compounds into nanoparticles has many potential advantages in enhancing bioavailability and improving therapeutic efficacy. However, few drug molecules will assemble into stable, well-defined nanoparticulate structures. Amphiphilic polymer coatings are able to stabilise nanop...

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Autores principales: Styliari, Ioanna Danai, Taresco, Vincenzo, Theophilus, Andrew, Alexander, Cameron, Garnett, Martin, Laughton, Charles
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9054057/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35515456
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra00408a
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author Styliari, Ioanna Danai
Taresco, Vincenzo
Theophilus, Andrew
Alexander, Cameron
Garnett, Martin
Laughton, Charles
author_facet Styliari, Ioanna Danai
Taresco, Vincenzo
Theophilus, Andrew
Alexander, Cameron
Garnett, Martin
Laughton, Charles
author_sort Styliari, Ioanna Danai
collection PubMed
description The formulation of drug compounds into nanoparticles has many potential advantages in enhancing bioavailability and improving therapeutic efficacy. However, few drug molecules will assemble into stable, well-defined nanoparticulate structures. Amphiphilic polymer coatings are able to stabilise nanoparticles, imparting defined surface properties for many possible drug delivery applications. In the present article we explore, both experimentally and in silico, a potential methodology to coat drug nanoparticles with an amphiphilic co-polymer. Monomethoxy polyethylene glycol–polycaprolactone (mPEG-b-PCL) diblock copolymers with different mPEG lengths (M(w) 350, 550, 750 and 2000), designed to give different levels of colloidal stability, were used to coat the surface of indomethacin nanoparticles. Polymer coating was achieved by a flow nanoprecipitation method that demonstrated excellent batch-to-batch reproducibility and resulted in nanoparticles with high drug loadings (up to 78%). At the same time, in order to understand this modified nanoprecipitation method at an atomistic level, large-scale all-atom molecular dynamics simulations were performed in parallel using the GROMOS53a6 forcefield parameters. It was observed that the mPEG-b-PCL chains act synergistically with the acetone molecules to dissolve the indomethacin nanoparticle while after the removal of the acetone molecules (mimicking the evaporation of the organic solvent) a polymer–drug nanoparticle was formed (yield 99%). This work could facilitate the development of more efficient methodologies for producing nanoparticles of hydrophobic drugs coated with amphiphilic polymers. The atomistic insight from the MD simulations in tandem with the data from the drug encapsulation experiments thus leads the way to a nanoformulation-by-design approach for therapeutic nanoparticles.
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spelling pubmed-90540572022-05-04 Nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles Styliari, Ioanna Danai Taresco, Vincenzo Theophilus, Andrew Alexander, Cameron Garnett, Martin Laughton, Charles RSC Adv Chemistry The formulation of drug compounds into nanoparticles has many potential advantages in enhancing bioavailability and improving therapeutic efficacy. However, few drug molecules will assemble into stable, well-defined nanoparticulate structures. Amphiphilic polymer coatings are able to stabilise nanoparticles, imparting defined surface properties for many possible drug delivery applications. In the present article we explore, both experimentally and in silico, a potential methodology to coat drug nanoparticles with an amphiphilic co-polymer. Monomethoxy polyethylene glycol–polycaprolactone (mPEG-b-PCL) diblock copolymers with different mPEG lengths (M(w) 350, 550, 750 and 2000), designed to give different levels of colloidal stability, were used to coat the surface of indomethacin nanoparticles. Polymer coating was achieved by a flow nanoprecipitation method that demonstrated excellent batch-to-batch reproducibility and resulted in nanoparticles with high drug loadings (up to 78%). At the same time, in order to understand this modified nanoprecipitation method at an atomistic level, large-scale all-atom molecular dynamics simulations were performed in parallel using the GROMOS53a6 forcefield parameters. It was observed that the mPEG-b-PCL chains act synergistically with the acetone molecules to dissolve the indomethacin nanoparticle while after the removal of the acetone molecules (mimicking the evaporation of the organic solvent) a polymer–drug nanoparticle was formed (yield 99%). This work could facilitate the development of more efficient methodologies for producing nanoparticles of hydrophobic drugs coated with amphiphilic polymers. The atomistic insight from the MD simulations in tandem with the data from the drug encapsulation experiments thus leads the way to a nanoformulation-by-design approach for therapeutic nanoparticles. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9054057/ /pubmed/35515456 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra00408a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Styliari, Ioanna Danai
Taresco, Vincenzo
Theophilus, Andrew
Alexander, Cameron
Garnett, Martin
Laughton, Charles
Nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles
title Nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles
title_full Nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles
title_fullStr Nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles
title_full_unstemmed Nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles
title_short Nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles
title_sort nanoformulation-by-design: an experimental and molecular dynamics study for polymer coated drug nanoparticles
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9054057/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35515456
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra00408a
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