Targeted delivery of vitamins to a desirable area is an active branch in a modern pharmacology. The most important and difficult delivery of vitamin B-12 is that to bone marrow and nerve cells. Herein we present a first step towards the development of two types of smart carriers, polymer capsules and lyotropic liquid-crystalline nanosystems, for vitamin B-12 targeted delivery and induced release. A vitamin B-12 encapsulation technique into nanoengineered polymeric capsules produced by layer-by-layer assembling of polymeric shells on CaCO3 templates has been developed. The effectiveness of the process was demonstrated by optical absorption spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM) and small-angle X-ray diffraction. TEM and AFM analyses performed on capsules after their drying, confirmed the presence of the vitamin B-12 inside the capsules in the form of crystalline nanoaggregates, 50-300 nm in diameter. Soft lipid nanovectors consisting of amphiphilic phytantriol molecules, which in water excess spontaneously self-assembly in 3D well ordered inverse bicontinuous cubic bulk phase, were used as alternative carriers for vitamin B-12. It was shown that about 30% of the vitamin added in the preparation of the soft lipid system was actually encapsulated in cubosomes and that no structural changes occurred upon loading. The Vitamin stabilizes the lipid system playing the role of its structure-forming element. The biocompatible nature, the stability and the feasibility of these systems make them good candidates as carriers for hydrophilic vitamins.

Encapsulation of vitamin B12 into nanoengineered capsules and soft matter nanosystems for targeted delivery / Maiorova L.A.; Erokhina S.I.; Pisani M.; Barucca G.; Marcaccio M.; Koifman O.I.; Salnikov D.S.; Gromova O.A.; Astolfi P.; Ricci V.; Erokhin V.. - In: COLLOIDS AND SURFACES. B, BIOINTERFACES. - ISSN 0927-7765. - STAMPA. - 182:(2019), pp. 110366.1-110366.8. [10.1016/j.colsurfb.2019.110366]

Encapsulation of vitamin B12 into nanoengineered capsules and soft matter nanosystems for targeted delivery

Marcaccio M.;
2019

Abstract

Targeted delivery of vitamins to a desirable area is an active branch in a modern pharmacology. The most important and difficult delivery of vitamin B-12 is that to bone marrow and nerve cells. Herein we present a first step towards the development of two types of smart carriers, polymer capsules and lyotropic liquid-crystalline nanosystems, for vitamin B-12 targeted delivery and induced release. A vitamin B-12 encapsulation technique into nanoengineered polymeric capsules produced by layer-by-layer assembling of polymeric shells on CaCO3 templates has been developed. The effectiveness of the process was demonstrated by optical absorption spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM) and small-angle X-ray diffraction. TEM and AFM analyses performed on capsules after their drying, confirmed the presence of the vitamin B-12 inside the capsules in the form of crystalline nanoaggregates, 50-300 nm in diameter. Soft lipid nanovectors consisting of amphiphilic phytantriol molecules, which in water excess spontaneously self-assembly in 3D well ordered inverse bicontinuous cubic bulk phase, were used as alternative carriers for vitamin B-12. It was shown that about 30% of the vitamin added in the preparation of the soft lipid system was actually encapsulated in cubosomes and that no structural changes occurred upon loading. The Vitamin stabilizes the lipid system playing the role of its structure-forming element. The biocompatible nature, the stability and the feasibility of these systems make them good candidates as carriers for hydrophilic vitamins.
2019
Encapsulation of vitamin B12 into nanoengineered capsules and soft matter nanosystems for targeted delivery / Maiorova L.A.; Erokhina S.I.; Pisani M.; Barucca G.; Marcaccio M.; Koifman O.I.; Salnikov D.S.; Gromova O.A.; Astolfi P.; Ricci V.; Erokhin V.. - In: COLLOIDS AND SURFACES. B, BIOINTERFACES. - ISSN 0927-7765. - STAMPA. - 182:(2019), pp. 110366.1-110366.8. [10.1016/j.colsurfb.2019.110366]
Maiorova L.A.; Erokhina S.I.; Pisani M.; Barucca G.; Marcaccio M.; Koifman O.I.; Salnikov D.S.; Gromova O.A.; Astolfi P.; Ricci V.; Erokhin V.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/703849
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