4.2 Article

Preparation of silica hydrogels using a synthetic peptide for application as carriers for controlled drug release and mesoporous oxides

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE CERAMIC SOCIETY OF JAPAN
Volume 122, Issue 1422, Pages 134-140

Publisher

CERAMIC SOC JAPAN-NIPPON SERAMIKKUSU KYOKAI
DOI: 10.2109/jcersj2.122.134

Keywords

Silica gel; Peptide; Biomineralization; Encapsulation; Drug delivery systems; Mesoporous

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Sol-gel methods is a commonly used methods for encapsulation of enzyme and drug, but this method has two disadvantages of using acid or base as a catalyst and being difficult to control pore size of silica material. Even though synthesis under mild condition or silica with controlled pore size in the mesopore region have been reported, it is still difficult to achieve these two characteristics simultaneously. In this work, we chose 10-mer peptides of lysine (K), histidine (H), and block and alternate K and aspartic acid (D) as catalysts for silica mineralization, and silica gels were prepared using the synthetic peptides and a leave to stand synthesis method. The resulting silica hydrogels were lyophilized, and their surface areas and morphologies were characterized using the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) method and field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM), respectively. Silica gels prepared by the leave to stand method with K-10 and H-10 exhibited a mesoporous structure with high surface area (576 and 451m(2) g(-1), respectively) and pore volume (0.35 and 0.30 cm(3) g(-1), respectively). SEM images confirmed the mesoporous structure of these gels. We encapsulated fluorescein sodium salt as a model drug within silica hydrogels using K10 and H-10 as a catalyst. The silica hydrogel prepared using H-10 exhibited faster release of the drug (approximately 2.5-fold) than gels prepared using K-10. These results demonstrate that by changing isoelectric point binding between the peptide and pore structure, the synthesized silica hydrogel-peptide composites can be designed to control the release rate of an encapsulated drug. (C) 2014 The Ceramic Society of Japan. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available