Langmuir, Vol.21, No.20, 9308-9313, 2005
Active loading and tunable release of doxorubicin from block copolymer vesicles
Vesicles are spherical bilayers that offer a hydrophilic reservoir, suitable for the incorporation of water soluble molecules, as well as a hydrophobic wall that protects the loaded molecules from the external solution. The permeability of a vesicle wall made from polystyrene can be enhanced by adding a plasticizer such as dioxane. Tuning the wall permeability allows loading and release of molecules from vesicles to be controlled. In this study, vesicles are prepared from polystyrene(310)-b-poly(acrylic acid)(36) and used as model carriers for doxorubicin (DXR), a weak amine and a widely used anticancer drug. To increase the wall permeability, different amounts of dioxane are added to the vesicle solution. A pH gradient is created across the vesicle wall (inside acidic) and used as an active loading method to concentrate the drug inside the vesicles. The results show that a pH gradient of ca. 3.8 units can enhance the loading level up to 10-fold relative to loading in the absence of the gradient. After loading, the release of DXR from vesicles is followed as a function of the wall permeability. The diffusion coefficient of doxorubicin through polystyrene (D) is evaluated from the initial slope of the release curves; the value of D ranges from 8 x 10(-17) to 6 x 10(-16) cm(2)/s, depending on the degree of plasticization of the vesicle wall.