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Modelling drug adsorption in metal-organic frameworks: the role of solvent. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Solvents, particularly ethanol, significantly influence drug adsorption in metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), which are being studied for drug delivery.
  • A combination of computational and experimental methods was used to analyze how three drugs (5-FU, IBU, HU) interact with biocompatible MOFs, revealing that drug adsorption varies with solvent presence.
  • Findings indicate that electrostatic interactions drive drug adsorption at low pressures and that the size of the drug molecules affects their interaction energy in relation to the MOF's pore size.

Article Abstract

Solvent plays a key role in biological functions, catalysis, and drug delivery. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) due to their tunable functionalities, porosities and surface areas have been recently used as drug delivery vehicles. To investigate the effect of solvent on drug adsorption in MOFs, we have performed integrated computational and experimental studies in selected biocompatible MOFs, specifically, UiO-AZB, HKUST-1 (or CuBTC) and NH-MIL-53(Al). The adsorption of three drugs, namely, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), ibuprofen (IBU), and hydroxyurea (HU) were performed in the presence and absence of the ethanol. Our computational predictions, at 1 atmospheric pressure, showed a reasonable agreement with experimental studies performed in the presence of ethanol. We find that in the presence of ethanol the drug molecules were adsorbed at the interface of solvent and MOFs. Moreover, the computationally calculated adsorption isotherms suggested that the drug adsorption was driven by electrostatic interactions at lower pressures (<10 Pa). Our computational predictions in the absence of ethanol were higher compared to those in the presence of ethanol. The MOF-adsorbate interaction ( ) energy decreased with decrease in the size of a drug molecule in all three MOFs at all simulated pressures. At high pressure the interaction energy increases with increase in the MOFs pore size as the number of molecules adsorbed increases. Thus, our research shows the important role played by solvent in drug adsorption and suggests that it is critical to consider solvent while performing computational studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9033158PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra01746bDOI Listing

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