Bastiat Guillaume, Leroux Jean-Christophe
Canada Research Chair in Drug Delivery, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Montreal, P.O. Box 6128, Downtown Station, Montreal, QC, Canada H3C 3J7.
Canada Research Chair in Drug Delivery, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Montreal, P.O. Box 6128, Downtown Station, Montreal, QC, Canada H3C 3J7; Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences, ETH Zürich, Switzerland. ; Tel: +41 (0) 44 633 7310.
J Mater Chem. 2009 Apr 28;19(23):3867-3877. doi: 10.1039/B822657A.
Organogels are semi-solid systems in which an organic liquid phase is immobilized by a 3-dimensional network composed of self-assembled gelator molecules. Although there is a large variety of organogel systems, relatively few have been investigated in the field of drug delivery, owing mostly to the lack of information on their biocompatibility and toxicity. In this work, organogelator-biocompatible structures based on aromatic amino acids, namely, tyrosine, tryptophan, and phenylalanine were synthesized by derivatization with aliphatic chains. Their ability to gel an injectable vegetable oil ( safflower oil) and to sustain the release of a model anti-Alzheimer drug ( rivastigmine) was then evaluated. Organogels and molecular packing were characterized by differential scanning calorimetry, rheology analysis, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography. The amino acid derivatives were able to gel safflower oil through van der Waals interactions and H-bonds. Tyrosine-derivatives produced the strongest gels while tryptophan was associated with poor gelling properties. The superior gelling ability of tyrosine derivatives could be explained by their well-structured 2-dimensional packing in the network. The addition of an optimal -methyl-2-pyrrolidone amount to tyrosine gels fluidized the network and allowed their injection through conventional needles. Upon contact with an aqueous medium, the gels formed and released entrapped rivastigmine in a sustained fashion.
有机凝胶是一种半固体体系,其中有机液相被由自组装凝胶剂分子组成的三维网络固定。尽管有机凝胶体系种类繁多,但在药物递送领域中,对其进行研究的相对较少,主要原因是缺乏关于它们的生物相容性和毒性的信息。在这项工作中,通过脂肪链衍生化合成了基于芳香族氨基酸(即酪氨酸、色氨酸和苯丙氨酸)的生物相容性有机凝胶剂结构。然后评估了它们使可注射植物油(红花油)凝胶化以及维持模型抗阿尔茨海默病药物(卡巴拉汀)释放的能力。通过差示扫描量热法、流变学分析、傅里叶变换红外光谱和X射线晶体学对有机凝胶和分子堆积进行了表征。氨基酸衍生物能够通过范德华相互作用和氢键使红花油凝胶化。酪氨酸衍生物形成的凝胶最强,而色氨酸的凝胶化性能较差。酪氨酸衍生物优异的凝胶化能力可以通过它们在网络中结构良好的二维堆积来解释。向酪氨酸凝胶中加入适量的N-甲基-2-吡咯烷酮可使网络流化,并允许通过传统针头进行注射。与水性介质接触后,凝胶形成并持续释放包封的卡巴拉汀。