Swellable silk fibroin microneedles for transdermal drug delivery

[Display omitted] •A novel swell-to-release silk fibroin micromeedles system for transdermal drug delivery were prepared in this paper.•Silk fibroin micromeedles were swellable and insoluble with different micromolecular reagents mixed.•2-Ethoxyethanol modified silk fibroin microneedles can easily p...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biological macromolecules 2018-01, Vol.106, p.48-56
Hauptverfasser: Yin, Zhuping, Kuang, Dajiang, Wang, Shiyi, Zheng, Zhaozhu, Yadavalli, Vamsi K., Lu, Shenzhou
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container_title International journal of biological macromolecules
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creator Yin, Zhuping
Kuang, Dajiang
Wang, Shiyi
Zheng, Zhaozhu
Yadavalli, Vamsi K.
Lu, Shenzhou
description [Display omitted] •A novel swell-to-release silk fibroin micromeedles system for transdermal drug delivery were prepared in this paper.•Silk fibroin micromeedles were swellable and insoluble with different micromolecular reagents mixed.•2-Ethoxyethanol modified silk fibroin microneedles can easily pierce porcine skin with a depth of ∼200μm in vitro.•The swelling modified silk fibroin micromeedles exhibit controllable drug releasing capacities than those of no modified.•The better swelling capacity of the microneedles produces the higher transdermal drug release kinetics and final accumulative releasing ratio. In this paper, a swelling-modified silk fibroin (SF) microneedle for transdermal drug delivery is presented. The microneedles undergo a phase transition from a dried and rigid state to a semi-solid, acerose hydrogel state with a controlled 3-dimensional (3D) porous network structure. Different micromolecular reagents have been studied for mixing with aqueous silk fibroin to endow a swellable and insoluble capacity to the SF. The aqueous SF composite is poured on a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) mold with arranged micropores on its surface to fabricate SF microneedles with high fidelity and mechanical robustness. The results demonstrate that 2-ethoxyethanol (ECS) modified SF microneedles can easily pierce porcine skin with a depth of ∼200μm in vitro, and transform into semi-solid hydrogels with 50–700nm porous network inside. These swelling-modified microneedles can accomplish a significantly enhanced transdermal drug release capacity in proportion to their swelling characteristics. The better swelling capacity of the microneedles produces larger pores, resulting in higher transdermal drug release kinetics. There is also a relationship between swollen pore dimensions and the molecular weights of encapsulated therapeutics. The controllable properties of these SF microneedles coupled with their high biocompatibility, render swell-to-release ECS/SF composites as viable transdermal delivery devices.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2017.07.178
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In this paper, a swelling-modified silk fibroin (SF) microneedle for transdermal drug delivery is presented. The microneedles undergo a phase transition from a dried and rigid state to a semi-solid, acerose hydrogel state with a controlled 3-dimensional (3D) porous network structure. Different micromolecular reagents have been studied for mixing with aqueous silk fibroin to endow a swellable and insoluble capacity to the SF. The aqueous SF composite is poured on a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) mold with arranged micropores on its surface to fabricate SF microneedles with high fidelity and mechanical robustness. The results demonstrate that 2-ethoxyethanol (ECS) modified SF microneedles can easily pierce porcine skin with a depth of ∼200μm in vitro, and transform into semi-solid hydrogels with 50–700nm porous network inside. These swelling-modified microneedles can accomplish a significantly enhanced transdermal drug release capacity in proportion to their swelling characteristics. The better swelling capacity of the microneedles produces larger pores, resulting in higher transdermal drug release kinetics. There is also a relationship between swollen pore dimensions and the molecular weights of encapsulated therapeutics. 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The better swelling capacity of the microneedles produces larger pores, resulting in higher transdermal drug release kinetics. There is also a relationship between swollen pore dimensions and the molecular weights of encapsulated therapeutics. 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In this paper, a swelling-modified silk fibroin (SF) microneedle for transdermal drug delivery is presented. The microneedles undergo a phase transition from a dried and rigid state to a semi-solid, acerose hydrogel state with a controlled 3-dimensional (3D) porous network structure. Different micromolecular reagents have been studied for mixing with aqueous silk fibroin to endow a swellable and insoluble capacity to the SF. The aqueous SF composite is poured on a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) mold with arranged micropores on its surface to fabricate SF microneedles with high fidelity and mechanical robustness. The results demonstrate that 2-ethoxyethanol (ECS) modified SF microneedles can easily pierce porcine skin with a depth of ∼200μm in vitro, and transform into semi-solid hydrogels with 50–700nm porous network inside. These swelling-modified microneedles can accomplish a significantly enhanced transdermal drug release capacity in proportion to their swelling characteristics. The better swelling capacity of the microneedles produces larger pores, resulting in higher transdermal drug release kinetics. There is also a relationship between swollen pore dimensions and the molecular weights of encapsulated therapeutics. The controllable properties of these SF microneedles coupled with their high biocompatibility, render swell-to-release ECS/SF composites as viable transdermal delivery devices.</abstract><cop>Netherlands</cop><pub>Elsevier B.V</pub><pmid>28778522</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2017.07.178</doi><tpages>9</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Administration, Cutaneous
Animals
Biocompatible Materials - chemistry
Bombyx
Dextrans - metabolism
Dextrans - pharmacokinetics
Dimethylpolysiloxanes - chemistry
Drug Delivery Systems - instrumentation
Drug Delivery Systems - methods
Drug Liberation
Ethylene Glycols - chemistry
Fibroins - chemistry
Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate - analogs & derivatives
Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate - metabolism
Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate - pharmacokinetics
Hydrogel
Hydrogels - chemistry
Kinetics
Microneedle
Needles
Phase Transition
Porosity
Silk fibroin
Skin - metabolism
Swine
Wettability
title Swellable silk fibroin microneedles for transdermal drug delivery
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