24 research outputs found

    The targeted delivery of multicomponent cargos to cancer cells by nanoporous particle-supported lipid bilayers.

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    Encapsulation of drugs within nanocarriers that selectively target malignant cells promises to mitigate side effects of conventional chemotherapy and to enable delivery of the unique drug combinations needed for personalized medicine. To realize this potential, however, targeted nanocarriers must simultaneously overcome multiple challenges, including specificity, stability and a high capacity for disparate cargos. Here we report porous nanoparticle-supported lipid bilayers (protocells) that synergistically combine properties of liposomes and nanoporous particles. Protocells modified with a targeting peptide that binds to human hepatocellular carcinoma exhibit a 10,000-fold greater affinity for human hepatocellular carcinoma than for hepatocytes, endothelial cells or immune cells. Furthermore, protocells can be loaded with combinations of therapeutic (drugs, small interfering RNA and toxins) and diagnostic (quantum dots) agents and modified to promote endosomal escape and nuclear accumulation of selected cargos. The enormous capacity of the high-surface-area nanoporous core combined with the enhanced targeting efficacy enabled by the fluid supported lipid bilayer enable a single protocell loaded with a drug cocktail to kill a drug-resistant human hepatocellular carcinoma cell, representing a 10(6)-fold improvement over comparable liposomes

    Thermodynamic Properties of Electrolyte Solutions, Derived from Fluctuation Correlations: A Methodological Review

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    This article presents a review of an approach for studying solution thermodynamics, which is based the on hydrodynamic fluctuation correlations analysis method suggested by Landau and Lifshitz. We show that the method is very general, and its applicability goes beyond hydrodynamics. It starts with examining the entropy production and fluctuating transport fluxes, which are related to concentration fluctuations and molecular interactions. The approach can be successfully applied to compute a wide range of thermodynamic properties such as the osmotic pressure (i.e., equation of state) and provides information about the interactions between the dissolved species. Using dilute electrolyte solutions as a case study, we reproduce results from the Debye and Huckel theory while starting from a very different physical perspective

    Electric Double Layers with Surface Charge Regulation Using Density Functional Theory

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    Surprisingly, the local structure of electrolyte solutions in electric double layers is primarily determined by the solvent. This is initially unexpected as the solvent is usually a neutral species and not a subject to dominant Coulombic interactions. Part of the solvent dominance in determining the local structure is simply due to the much larger number of solvent molecules in a typical electrolyte solution.The dominant local packing of solvent then creates a space left for the charged species. Our classical density functional theory work demonstrates that the solvent structural effect strongly couples to the surface chemistry, which governs the charge and potential. In this article we address some outstanding questions relating double layer modeling. Firstly, we address the role of ion-ion correlations that go beyond mean field correlations. Secondly we consider the effects of a density dependent dielectric constant which is crucial in the description of a electrolyte-vapor interface
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