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      Nanostructure and cytotoxicity of self-assembled monoolein–capric acid lyotropic liquid crystalline nanoparticles

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          Abstract

          Monoolein–capric acid combinations form into particles with internal nanostructures, including inverse hexagonal and bicontinuous cubic mesophases, with differing cytotoxicity.

          Abstract

          Monoolein forms self-assembled nanoparticles with various internally ordered nanostructures, including the lyotropic liquid crystalline inverse hexagonal and inverse bicontinuous cubic phases. This study investigated the influence of a saturated fatty acid, capric acid (decanoic acid), on the formation of different lyotropic liquid crystalline phases in monoolein-based systems. The nanoparticles were characterized by synchrotron small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM), dynamic light scattering, and zeta potential measurements. The addition of capric acid to monoolein triggered concentration dependent phase changes with the sequence evolving from an inverse primitive cubic phase to inverse double-diamond cubic, inverse hexagonal (H II), and emulsified microemulsions. SAXS and cryo-TEM revealed the formation of both single phase and mixed phases within a nanoparticle. To understand the cytotoxicity effects of the different nanoparticles, cellular cytotoxicity and hemolysis assays were performed. Nanoparticles in emulsion and hexagonal phases were found to be less toxic than cubic phase nanoparticles. The hemolysis assays followed the same trend with cubic phase dispersions causing the highest level of hemoglobin release. In summary, this study showed that the internal lyotropic liquid crystal mesophase structure of self-assembled nanoparticles needs careful consideration in the design of drug delivery vehicles.

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          Most cited references63

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          Theory of self-assembly of hydrocarbon amphiphiles into micelles and bilayers

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            Cubic lipid-water phases: structures and biomembrane aspects

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              Self-assembled multicompartment liquid crystalline lipid carriers for protein, peptide, and nucleic acid drug delivery.

              Lipids and lipopolymers self-assembled into biocompatible nano- and mesostructured functional materials offer many potential applications in medicine and diagnostics. In this Account, we demonstrate how high-resolution structural investigations of bicontinuous cubic templates made from lyotropic thermosensitive liquid-crystalline (LC) materials have initiated the development of innovative lipidopolymeric self-assembled nanocarriers. Such structures have tunable nanochannel sizes, morphologies, and hierarchical inner organizations and provide potential vehicles for the predictable loading and release of therapeutic proteins, peptides, or nucleic acids. This Account shows that structural studies of swelling of bicontinuous cubic lipid/water phases are essential for overcoming the nanoscale constraints for encapsulation of large therapeutic molecules in multicompartment lipid carriers. For the systems described here, we have employed time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and high-resolution freeze-fracture electronic microscopy (FF-EM) to study the morphology and the dynamic topological transitions of these nanostructured multicomponent amphiphilic assemblies. Quasi-elastic light scattering and circular dichroism spectroscopy can provide additional information at the nanoscale about the behavior of lipid/protein self-assemblies under conditions that approximate physiological hydration. We wanted to generalize these findings to control the stability and the hydration of the water nanochannels in liquid-crystalline lipid nanovehicles and confine therapeutic biomolecules within these structures. Therefore we analyzed the influence of amphiphilic and soluble additives (e.g. poly(ethylene glycol)monooleate (MO-PEG), octyl glucoside (OG), proteins) on the nanochannels' size in a diamond (D)-type bicontinuous cubic phase of the lipid glycerol monooleate (MO). At body temperature, we can stabilize long-living swollen states, corresponding to a diamond cubic phase with large water channels. Time-resolved X-ray diffraction (XRD) scans allowed us to detect metastable intermediate and coexisting structures and monitor the temperature-induced phase sequences of mixed systems containing glycerol monooleate, a soluble protein macromolecule, and an interfacial curvature modulating agent. These observed states correspond to the stages of the growth of the nanofluidic channel network. With the application of a thermal stimulus, the system becomes progressively more ordered into a double-diamond cubic lattice formed by a bicontinuous lipid membrane. High-resolution freeze-fracture electronic microscopy indicates that nanodomains are induced by the inclusion of proteins into nanopockets of the supramolecular cubosomic assemblies. These results contribute to the understanding of the structure and dynamics of functionalized self-assembled lipid nanosystems during stimuli-triggered LC phase transformations.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                RSCACL
                RSC Advances
                RSC Adv.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2046-2069
                2015
                2015
                : 5
                : 34
                : 26785-26795
                Affiliations
                [1 ]CSIRO Manufacturing Flagship
                [2 ]Clayton
                [3 ]3168 Australia
                [4 ]SAXS/WAXS beamline
                [5 ]Australian Synchrotron
                [6 ]CSIRO Animal, Food and Health Sciences
                [7 ]Australian Animal Health Laboratory
                [8 ]East Geelong
                [9 ]3219 Australia
                [10 ]Parkville
                [11 ]3052 Australia
                [12 ]School of Applied Sciences
                [13 ]College of Science, Engineering and Health
                Article
                10.1039/C5RA02604K
                2ccfe3f1-9040-4a8d-b063-7e8543918883
                © 2015
                History

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