Large scale production of vesicles by hollow fiber extrusion: a novel method for generating polymersome encapsulated hemoglobin dispersions.

Langmuir

William G. Lowrie Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University, 425 Koffolt Laboratories, 140 West 19th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA.

Published: April 2010

Vesicles, which include both liposomes and polymersomes (polymer vesicles), are being developed as therapeutic drug carriers. In this study, we present a fully scalable low pressure extrusion methodology for preparing vesicles. Vesicles were generated by continuous extrusion through a 200 nm pore diameter hollow fiber (HF) membrane. The first half of this study describes a method for generating empty polymersomes composed of different molecular weight amphiphilic poly(butadiene-b-ethylene oxide) (PBD-b-PEO) diblock copolymers on a large scale (50-100 mL) using a HF membrane. Monodisperse empty polymersomes were formed with particle diameters slightly less than 200 nm, which were close to the rated 200 nm pore size of the HF membrane. The second half of this study describes the successful encapsulation of hemoglobin (Hb) inside the aqueous core of polymersomes using the HF extrusion methodology. We demonstrate that polymersome encapsulated hemoglobin (PEH) particles formed by this technique had similar oxygen affinity, cooperativity coefficient, and methemoglobin (metHb) level compared to PEH particles formed by the 1 mL volume small scale manual extrusion method. Most notably, Hb encapsulation inside the polymer vesicles formed by the HF extrusion method increased 2-fold compared to the manual extrusion method. This work is important, since it will enable facile scale-up of homogeneous vesicle dispersions that are typically required for preclinical and clinical studies as well as industrial use.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2847677PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la9036343DOI Listing

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