| Literature DB >> 27067732 |
Yanyan Xie1, Jun Zhao1, Renliang Huang2, Wei Qi3,4,5, Yuefei Wang1, Rongxin Su1,6,7, Zhimin He1.
Abstract
We report a new approach to constructing a peptide-polysaccharide hybrid hydrogel via the calcium-ion-triggered co-assembly of fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl-diphenylalanine (Fmoc-FF) peptide and alginate. Calcium ions triggered the self-assembly of Fmoc-FF peptide into nanofibers with diameter of about 30 nm. Meanwhile, alginate was rapidly crosslinked by the calcium ions, leading to the formation of stable hybrid hydrogel beads. Compared to alginate or Fmoc-FF hydrogel alone, the hybrid Fmoc-FF/alginate hydrogel had much better stability in both water and a phosphate-buffered solution (PBS), probably because of the synergistic effect of noncovalent and ionic interactions. Furthermore, docetaxel was chosen as a drug model, and it was encapsulated by hydrogel beads to study the in vitro release behavior. The sustained and controlled docetaxel release was obtained by varying the concentration ratio between Fmoc-FF peptide and alginate.Entities:
Keywords: Co-assembly; Drug delivery; Hybrid hydrogel; Peptide; Polysaccharide
Year: 2016 PMID: 27067732 PMCID: PMC4828348 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-016-1415-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of calcium-ion-triggered co-assembly of peptide and alginate at an aqueous liquid–liquid interface to synthesize Fmoc-FF–alginate hydrogel beads
Fig. 2a-b SEM images of Fmoc-FF nanofibers formed in the presence of Ca2+ ions
Fig. 3Photos of the (a) Fmoc-FF–alginate solution and (b) Fmoc-FF–alginate hydrogel beads. (c– g) SEM images of Fmoc-FF–alginate hydrogel beads formed in the presence of Ca2+ ions
Fig. 4SEM images of Fmoc-FF–alginate hydrogel beads formed in (a) a CaCl2 solution and (b) a CaCl2–HCl mixed solution (pH = 6)
Fig. 5Retention of hydrogel beads in water and PBS after 24 h. FAg-1 is the Fmoc-FF–alginate hybrid hydrogel (concentration ratio of 2:1); FAg-2 is the Fmoc-FF–alginate hybrid hydrogel (concentration ratio of 1:1)
Fig. 6(a) Zeta potential of Fmoc-FF and alginate molecule in water. (b) FTIR spectra of Fmoc-FF hydrogel, alginate hydrogel, and Fmoc-FF–alginate hybrid hydrogel
Fig. 7(a-b) SEM images of the docetaxel-loaded Fmoc-FF–alginate hydrogel beads
Fig. 8Cumulative release of docetaxel from drug-loaded Fmoc-FF hydrogel beads and drug-loaded Fmoc-FF–alginate hydrogel beads with different alginate concentrations
Fig. 9Plots of lg (release, %) against lg (time, min) for docetaxel release from drug-loaded Fmoc-FF–alginate hydrogel beads: (a) 0-1.25 h; (b) 1.25 -24 h.
Release exponent (n), rate constant (k), and correlation coefficient (R 2) obtained from the power law equation
| Hydrogels | 0–1.25 h | 1.25–24 h | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Fmoc-FF | 0.3184 | 8.3163 | 0.8538 | 0.0885 | 25.326 | 0.9037 |
| Fmoc-FF/alginate = 2 | 0.5094 | 1.9773 | 0.9565 | 0.0890 | 13.191 | 0.8036 |
| Fmoc-FF/alginate = 1 | 0.5962 | 0.6024 | 0.9605 | 0.3359 | 1.6846 | 0.9518 |