Electrospun Amphiphilic Nanofibers as Templates for In Situ Preparation of Chloramphenicol-Loaded Liposomes
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/22960Date
2021-10-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Laidmae, Ivo; Meos, Andres; Alainezhad Kjærvik, Irja; Ingebrigtsen, Sveinung Gaarden; Skalko-Basnet, Natasa; Kirsimäe, Kalle; Romann, Tavo; Joost, Urmas; Kisand, Vambola; Kogermann, KarinAbstract
The hydration of phospholipids, electrospun into polymeric nanofibers and used as templates for liposome formation, offers pharmaceutical advantages as it avoids the storage of liposomes
as aqueous dispersions. The objective of the present study was to electrospin and characterize
amphiphilic nanofibers as templates for the preparation of antibiotic-loaded liposomes and compare
this method with the conventional film-hydration method followed by extrusion. The comparison
was based on particle size, encapsulation efficiency and drug-release behavior. Chloramphenicol
(CAM) was used at different concentrations as a model antibacterial drug. Phosphatidylcoline (PC)
with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), using ethanol as a solvent, was found to be successful in fabricating
the amphiphilic composite drug-loaded nanofibers as well as liposomes with both methods. The characterization of the nanofiber templates revealed that fiber diameter did not affect the liposome size.
According to the optical microscopy results, the immediate hydration of phospholipids deposited on
the amphiphilic nanofibers occurred within a few seconds, resulting in the formation of liposomes
in water dispersions. The liposomes appeared to aggregate more readily in the concentrated than
in the diluted solutions. The drug encapsulation efficiency for the fiber-hydrated liposomes varied
between 14.9 and 28.1% and, for film-hydrated liposomes, between 22.0 and 77.1%, depending on
the CAM concentrations and additional extrusion steps. The nanofiber hydration method was faster,
as less steps were required for the in-situ liposome preparation than in the film-hydration method.
The liposomes obtained using nanofiber hydration were smaller and more homogeneous than the
conventional liposomes, but less drug was encapsulated.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Laidmae I, Meos, Alainezhad Kjærvik, Ingebrigtsen SG, Skalko-Basnet N, Kirsimäe K, Romann, Joost U, Kisand, Kogermann K. Electrospun Amphiphilic Nanofibers as Templates for In Situ Preparation of Chloramphenicol-Loaded Liposomes. Pharmaceutics. 2021;13:1742Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2021 The Author(s)