Volume 4, Issue 4 , Pages 302-310, December 2008
pH-controlled drug loading and release from biodegradable microcapsules
Abstract
Microcapsules made of biopolymers are of both scientific and technological interest and have many potential applications in medicine, including their use as controlled drug delivery devices. The present study makes use of the electrostatic interaction between polycations and polyanions to form a multilayered microcapsule shell and also to control the loading and release of charged drug molecules inside the microcapsule. Micron-sized calcium carbonate (CaCO3) particles were synthesized and integrated with chondroitin sulfate (CS) through a reaction between sodium carbonate and calcium nitrate tetrahydrate solutions suspended with CS macromolecules. Oppositely charged biopolymers were alternately deposited onto the synthesized particles using electrostatic layer-by-layer self-assembly, and glutaraldehyde was introduced to cross-link the multilayered shell structure. Microcapsules integrated with CS inside the multilayered shells were obtained after decomposition of the CaCO3 templates. The integration of a matrix (i.e., CS) permitted the subsequent selective control of drug loading and release. The CS-integrated microcapsules were loaded with a model drug, bovine serum albumin labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC-BSA), and it was shown that pH was an effective means of controlling the loading and release of FITC-BSA. Such CS-integrated microcapsules may be used for controlled localized drug delivery as biodegradable devices, which have advantages in reducing systemic side effects and increasing drug efficacy.
Key words: Microcapsule, Controlled release, Drug delivery, Biodegradable
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Financial support from National Aeronautics and Space Administration West Virginia Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, West Virginia University (WVU) Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, and WVU Senate Grant are acknowledged. No commercial associations, current and within the past 5 years, that might pose a potential, perceived, or real conflict of interest, were reported by the authors of this article.
PII: S1549-9634(08)00089-0
doi:10.1016/j.nano.2008.06.004
© 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 4, Issue 4 , Pages 302-310, December 2008
