| Literature DB >> 28859938 |
Miles C Braithwaite1, Pradeep Kumar1, Yahya E Choonara1, Lisa C du Toit1, Lomas K Tomar1, Charu Tyagi1, Viness Pillay2.
Abstract
This study was conducted to provide a mechanistic account for understanding the synthesis, characterization and solubility phenomena of vitamin complexes with cyclodextrins (CD) for enhanced solubility and stability employing experimental and in silico molecular modeling strategies. New geometric, molecular and energetic analyses were pursued to explicate experimentally derived cholecalciferol complexes. Various CD molecules (α-, β-, γ-, and hydroxypropyl β-) were complexed with three vitamins: cholecalciferol, ascorbic acid and α-tocopherol. The Inclusion Efficiency (IE%) was computed for each CD-vitamin complex. The highest IE% achieved for a cholecalciferol complex was for 'βCDD3-8', after utilizing a unique CD:cholecalciferol molar synthesis ratio of 2.5:1, never before reported as successful. 2HPβCD-cholecalciferol, γCD-cholecalciferol and α-tocopherol inclusion complexes (IC's) reached maximal IE% with a CD:vitamin molar ratio of 5:1. The results demonstrate that IE%, thermal stability, concentration, carrier solubility, molecular mechanics and intended release profile are key factors to consider when synthesizing vitamin-CD complexes. Phase-solubility data provided insights into the design of formulations with IC's that may provide analogous oral vitamin release profiles even when hydrophobic and hydrophilic vitamins are co-incorporated. Static lattice atomistic simulations were able to validate experimentally derived cholecalciferol IE phenomena and are invaluable parameters when approaching formulation strategies using CD's for improved solubility and efficacy of vitamins.Entities:
Keywords: Ascorbic acid and α-tocopherol; Cholecalciferol; Cyclodextrins; In silico molecular modeling; Inclusion complex; Solubility; Vitamins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28859938 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2017.08.109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pharm ISSN: 0378-5173 Impact factor: 5.875