Litcius/Paper detail

Methyl-Branched Liposomes as a Depot for Sustained Drug Delivery

Yang Li, Rachelle Shao, Claire A. Ostertag‐Hill, Matthew Torre, Ran Yan, Daniel S. Kohane

2023Nano Letters10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Inadequate drug loading and control of payload leakage limit the duration of the effect of liposomal drug carriers and may cause toxicity. Here, we report a liposome system as a depot for sustained drug delivery whose design is inspired by the low permeability of Archaeal membranes to protons and solutes. Incorporating methyl-branched phospholipids into lipid bilayers decreased payload diffusion across liposomal membranes, thereby enhancing the drug load capacity by 10-16% and reducing the release of small molecules in the first 24 h by 40-48%. The in vivo impact of this approach was demonstrated by injection at the sciatic nerve. Methyl-branched liposomes encapsulating the anesthetic tetrodotoxin (TTX) achieved markedly prolonged local anesthesia lasting up to 70 h, in comparison to the 16 h achieved with liposomes containing conventional lipids. The present work demonstrates the usefulness of methyl-branched liposomes to enhance liposomal depot systems for sustained drug delivery.

Topics & Concepts

LiposomeDrug deliveryDrugDepotIn vivoChemistryPharmacologyDrug carrierMembraneAnestheticMedicineAnesthesiaBiochemistryOrganic chemistryBiologyBiotechnologyArchaeologyHistoryNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryLipid Membrane Structure and BehaviorSupramolecular Chemistry and Complexes
Methyl-Branched Liposomes as a Depot for Sustained Drug Delivery | Litcius