| Literature DB >> 33982812 |
Victor Dal Posolo Cinel1, Thiago Bezerra Taketa2, Bruna Gregatti de Carvalho2, Lucimara Gaziola de la Torre2, Lucas Rodrigues de Mello1, Emerson Rodrigo da Silva1, Sang Won Han1.
Abstract
Efficient delivery of nanometric vectors complexed with nanoparticles at a target tissue without spreading to other tissues is one of the main challenges in gene therapy. One means to overcome this problem is to confine such vectors within microgels that can be placed in a target tissue to be released slowly and locally. Herein, a conventional optical microscope coupled to a common smartphone was employed to monitor the microfluidic production of monodisperse alginate microgels containing nanoparticles as a model for the encapsulation of vectors. Alginate microgels (1.2%) exhibited an average diameter of 125 ± 3 μm, which decreased to 106 ± 5 μm after encapsulating 30 nm fluorescent nanoparticles. The encapsulation efficiency was 70.9 ± 18.9%. In a 0.1 M NaCl solution, 55 ± 5% and 92 ± 4.7% of nanoparticles were released in 30 minutes and 48 hours, respectively. Microgel topography assessment by atomic force microscopy revealed that incorporation of nanoparticles into the alginate matrix changes the scaffold's interfacial morphology and induces crystallization with the appearance of oriented domains. The high encapsulation rate of nanoparticles, alongside their continuous release of nanoparticles over time, makes these microgels and the production unit a valuable system for vector encapsulation for gene therapy research.Entities:
Keywords: alginate hydrogels; competitive ligand exchange crosslinking; droplet microfluidics; microgels; nanoparticles encapsulation
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33982812 DOI: 10.1002/bip.23432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biopolymers ISSN: 0006-3525 Impact factor: 2.505