| Literature DB >> 31681741 |
Tommaso Casalini1, Filippo Rossi2, Andrea Castrovinci1, Giuseppe Perale1,3.
Abstract
Polylactic acid (PLA)-based polymers are ubiquitous in the biomedical field thanks to their combination of attractive peculiarities: biocompatibility (degradation products do not elicit critical responses and are easily metabolized by the body), hydrolytic degradation in situ, tailorable properties, and well-established processing technologies. This led to the development of several applications, such as bone fixation screws, bioresorbable suture threads, and stent coating, just to name a few. Nanomedicine could not be unconcerned by PLA-based materials as well, where their use for the synthesis of nanocarriers for the targeted delivery of hydrophobic drugs emerged as a new promising application. The purpose of the here presented review is two-fold: on one side, it aims at providing a broad overview of PLA-based materials and their properties, which allow them gaining a leading role in the biomedical field; on the other side, it offers a specific focus on their recent use in nanomedicine, highlighting opportunities and perspectives.Entities:
Keywords: degradation; nanomedicine; nanoparticles; polylactic acid; processing
Year: 2019 PMID: 31681741 PMCID: PMC6797553 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2019.00259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Enantiomeric forms of lactic acid.
Main advantages and disadvantages of PLA.
Adapted from Farah et al. (.
Figure 2Cyclic dimers for ROP process.
Figure 3Main PLA production routes.
Mechanical properties of PLA-based polymers.
| ρ [g cm−3] | 1.21–1.25 | 1.24–1.30 | 1.25–1.27 |
| σ [MPa] | 21–60 | 15.5–150 | 27.6–50 |
| E [GPa] | 0.35–0.5 | 2.7–4.14 | 1–3.45 |
| ε [%] | 2.5–6 | 3.0–10.0 | 2.0–10.0 |
| Tg [°C] | 45–60 | 55–65 | 50–60 |
| Tm [°C] | 150–162 | 170–200 | amorphous–no melt point |
ρ, density; σ, tensile strength; E, elastic modulus; ε, ultimate strain; T.
Figure 4Schematic of degradation mechanisms.
Overview of PLA biomedical applications.
| Orthopedic | Peripheral nerve and spinal cord injury regeneration |
| Cardiac | Chest wall reconstruction |
| Dentistry | Guided tissue regeneration |
| Plastic surgery | Suture |
| General surgery | Hemia mesh |
| Gynecology | Stress incontinence mesh |
| Radiology | Theranostic imaging |
| Oncology | Nanoparticles for drug delivery |
Adapted from Tyler et al. (.
Examples of nanoparticles synthesis by means of emulsion-based methods.
| Bovine Serum Albumin | Double emulsion | 140–250 | Gao et al., |
| Nimesulide | Emulsion-solvent evaporation | 160–2,150 | Freitas and Marchetti, |
| Tetanus toxoid | Double emulsion | 353–1,153 | Bilati et al., |
| Lysozyme | Double emulsion | 369–459 | Bilati et al., |
| Insulin | Double emulsion | 1,000–1,400 | Bilati et al., |
| Betamethasone phosphate | O/w emulsion | 90–250 | Ishihara et al., |
| Vanillin | O/w emulsion | 240 | Dalmolin et al., |
| Hemoglobin | Double emulsion | 122–185 | Sheng et al., |
| Neurotoxin-I | Double emulsion | 65 | Cheng et al., |
| Triclosan | Double emulsion | 207–286 | Pinon-Segundo et al., |
| Paclitaxel | Single emulsion | 110 | Feng et al., |
Examples of nanoparticles synthesis by means of precipitation-based methods.
| Sodium cromoglycate | Nanoprecipitation | 470–1,300 | Peltonen et al., |
| Lysozyme | Nanoprecipitation | 137–351 | Bilati et al., |
| Tyrphostin | Nanoprecipitation | 65–143 | Chorny et al., |
| Cloricromene | Nanoprecipitation | 120–340 | Leo et al., |
| – | Nanoprecipitation | 100–300 | Legrand et al., |
| – | Salting out | 100–400 | Zweers et al., |
| – | Salting out | 279 | Nguyen et al., |
| – | Salting out | 248 | Zweers et al., |
| Savoxepine | Salting out | 274–736 | Leroux et al., |
| – | Dialysis | 40–250 | Lo et al., |
| Epirubicin | Dialysis | 128–1,088 | Liu et al., |
| Paclitaxel | Dialysis | 367–475 | Zhang et al., |
| HIV p24 protein | Dialysis | 200 | Aline et al., |
Advantages and disadvantages of the most common nanoparticles production methods.
| Single/double emulsion | Particle size can be tuned acting on several variables ( | High shear rate |
| Nanoprecipitation | Nanoparticles have a well-defined size and a narrow size distribution | Extensive optimization of polymer/solvent/non solvent system |
| Salting out | No heating process required | Extensive optimization of process conditions (type of salt and its concentration, type of polymer and solvent, and their ratio) |
| Supercritical fluids-based technology | Environmentally friendly solvents | Limited by polymer solubility in the supercritical fluid |
| Spray drying | Residual organic phase is immediately evaporated | It is difficult to control drug distribution into the nanoparticles |
| Melting techniques | No solvents required | Not suitable for thermally-sensitive compounds (e.g., proteins) |
| No need to recover particles | Solvent toxicity must be previously investigated. |
Process variables and their effect on particle size.
| Solvent | It depends on the specific solvent, i.e., its effect on emulsification. |
| Surfactant/stabilizer | It depends on the chemical nature of the stabilizer (ionic/non-ionic). |
| Shear rate | High shear rate decreases particle size. |
| PLA molecular weight | Size increases as molecular weight increases (the viscosity of dispersed phase increases). |
| PLA concentration | Size increases as polymer concentration increases (the viscosity of dispersed phase increases). |
| Stabilizer concentration | High stabilizer concentration (3% w/v or higher) decreases particle size. |
| Viscosity of the dispersed phase | Size increases as viscosity increases. |
Experimental techniques for nanoparticles characterization (Crucho and Barros, 2017).
| Atomic Force Microscopy | • Size and size distribution |
| Differential scanning calorimetry | • Physicochemical state and possible interactions between drug and polymer |
| Dynamic light scattering | • Particle size distribution (hydrodynamic radius); |
| Fluorescence microscopy | • Critical association concentration |
| High performance liquid chromatography | • Drug content |
| Infrared spectroscopy | • Structure and conformation of bioconjugates |
| Mass spectrometry | • Molecular weight |
| Near-field scanning optical microscopy | • Size |
| Nuclear magnetic resonance | • Structure |
| Scanning electron microscopy | • Size and particle size distribution |
| Transmission electron microscopy | • Size and particle size distribution |
| X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy | • Elemental and chemical composition a the surface |
| Zeta potential | • Stability referring to surface charge |
Design criteria for nanoparticles for drug delivery purposes (Dawidczyk et al., 2014).
| Circulation | • Stable under flow at 37°C | • Avoid binding with components of blood |
| Distribution | • Minimize tissue (peripheral) volume | |
| Elimination | • Minimize opsonization | • Stealth coating |
| Tumor accumulation | • Maximize extravasation across tumor vasculature | • Diameter <200 nm for transport across leaky vasculature through EPR |
| Tumor cell uptake | • Maximize binding/uptake by tumor cells | • Active or passive drug release at tumor site |
Summary of discussed examples of nanoparticles for drug delivery.
| PLA-PEG | Single emulsion | 100 | Vincristine | Systematic investigation of PEG coverage, release kinetics and injected dose | Yes | Shalgunov et al., |
| PLA | Nanoprecipitation | 200 | Nod receptor ligands | Induced systemic immune response for vaccine delivery | Yes | Pavot et al., |
| HES-PLA | Single emulsion | 155 | Doxorubicin and TGF-β inhibitor LY2157299 | Co-delivery of two active compounds | Yes | Zhou et al., |
| PLA-PEG | Nanoprecipitation | 100–150 | Curcumin, curcumin and bortezomib | Synergistic effects with co-delivery | No | Medel et al., |
| PLA-VS-PVA | Double emulsion | 220 | Lumogen Red (dye) | New stabilizer for easier surface functionalization | No | Raudszus et al., |
| TPGS-PLA | Single emulsion | 200 | Docetaxel | Nanoparticles coated with polydopamine and functionalized with galactosamine | Yes | Zhu et al., |
| PLA-PEG | Single emulsion | 100–120 | Paclitaxel | Surface functionalization with EGFP-EGF1 protein to enhance active targeting | Yes | Zhang et al., |
| PLGA-PEG | Single emulsion | 150 | Paclitaxel | Surface functionalization with ferritin for targeting, Gd-DOTAMA as imaging agent | No | Turino et al., |
| PLA-PEG | Nanoprecipitation | 30–50 | Acyclovir | Surface functionalization with amino acids | Yes | Gourdon et al., |
| PLA-PEI | Single emulsion | 140–220 | Doxorubicin hydrochloride | Surface functionalization with antibodies | Yes | Cui and Zhu, |
| FA-Pluronic-PLA | Dialysis | 190–260 | Paclitaxel | Synthesis of block copolymer with folate groups that target folate receptors | Yes | Xiong et al., |
| PLA | Nanoprecipitation | 200–240 | mRNA | mRNA adsorbed on surface through electrostatic interactions | No | Coolen et al., |
| PLA-PEG micelles | Thin-film hydration | 25 | Paclitaxel | pH-responsive system | Yes | Tang et al., |
| PLA-PEG | Single emulsion | 90–130 | AZD2811 | Development of a formulation library with different release kinetics | Yes | Song et al., |
| PLA-PEG PLGA | Single emulsion | 115–130 | Adapalene | Blending with short chains of aliphatic polyesters or lipid improves encapsulation | Yes | Medina et al., |