• Decrease font size
  • Return font size to normal
  • Increase font size
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Scientific Publications by FDA Staff

  • Print
  • Share
  • E-mail
-

Search Publications



Fields



Centers











Starting Date


Ending Date


Order by

Entry Details

Langmuir 2010 Jul 6;26(13):11581-8

Microfluidic directed self-assembly of liposome-hydrogel hybrid nanoparticles.

Hong JS, Stavis SM, DePaoli Lacerda SH, Locascio LE, Raghavan SR, Gaitan M

Abstract

We present a microfluidic method to direct the self-assembly of temperature-sensitive liposome-hydrogel hybrid nanoparticles. Our approach yields nanoparticles with structural properties and highly monodisperse size distributions precisely controlled across a broad range relevant to the targeted delivery and controlled release of encapsulated therapeutic agents. We used microfluidic hydrodynamic focusing to control the convective-diffusive mixing of two miscible nanoparticle precursor solutions (a DPPC:cholesterol:DCP phospholipid formulation in isopropanol and a photopolymerizable N-isopropylacrylamide mixture in aqueous buffer) to form nanoscale lipid vesicles with encapsulated hydrogel precursors. These precursor nanoparticles were collected off-chip and were irradiated with ultraviolet (UV) light in bulk to polymerize the nanoparticle interiors into hydrogel cores. Multiangle laser light scattering in conjunction with asymmetric flow field-flow fractionation was used to characterize nanoparticle size distributions, which spanned the approximately 150 to approximately 300 nm diameter range as controlled by microfluidic mixing conditions, with a polydispersity of approximately 3% to approximately 5% (relative standard deviation). Transmission electron microscopy was then used to confirm the spherical shape and core-shell composition of the hybrid nanoparticles. This method may be extended to the directed self-assembly of other similar cross-linked hybrid nanoparticle systems with engineered size/structure-function relationships for practical use in healthcare and life science applications.


Category: Journal Article
PubMed ID: #20429539 DOI: 10.1021/la100879p
Includes FDA Authors from Scientific Area(s): Biologics
Entry Created: 2011-10-04 Entry Last Modified: 2019-10-27
Feedback
-
-