Pharmaceutical excipient salts effect on micellization and drug solubilization of PEO-PPO-ph-PPO-PEO block copolymer

Publication date: Available online 10 February 2020Source: Colloids and Surfaces B: BiointerfacesAuthor(s): Yaoyao Zhu, Mengran Chu, Zixiao Wang, Yutao Xue, Bo Liu, Jie Sun, Teng LiuABSTRACTHydrophobic modification PEO-PPO copolymer BP123 was synthesized, with two aromatic rings in the centre linked to PEO-PPO blocks, and the identical PEO and PPO block numbers were possessed with commercial copolymer P123. The influence of three common pharmaceutical excipient salts sodium chloride (NaCl), sodium citrate (NaCA) and sodium benzoate (NaBZ) on self-assembly behaviors of BP123 and P123 was investigated via cloud point, surface tension, pyrene fluorescence and dynamic light scattering. Solubilization for hydrophobic drug simvastatin (SV) and in vitro drug release behavior were assessed accordingly. In the presence of NaCl or NaCA, cloud point and critical micellization concentration (CMC) decreased, micelles became more hydrophobic, micellar size and drug solubilization increased, drug release rate slowed, and the impact of NaCA was more significant than NaCl. Oppositely, cloud point and CMC increased with the addition of NaBZ. NaBZ could participate in the formation of micelles by hydrophobic aromatic ring, which greatly raised solubilization of SV. Moreover, a different performance occurred when NaBZ was added to BP123 or P123, due to the hydrophobic benzene rings in BP123, which prominently enhanced the interaction with hydrophobic drug, leading to obvious delay of drug relea...
Source: Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces - Category: Biochemistry Source Type: research