4.8 Article

Hydrophobic Effects in the Critical Destabilization and Release Dynamics of Degradable Multilayer Films

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 1108-1115

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cm802972d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR 02-13282]
  2. Institute for Soldier Nanotechnology (ISN)
  3. Deshpande Center [009216-1]
  4. National Institutes of Health [1-R01-AGO29601-01.]
  5. Bell Laboratories

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Recent research has highlighted the ability of hydrolytically degradable electrostatic layer-by-layer films to act as versatile drug delivery systems capable of multiagent release. A key element of these films is the potential to gain precise control of release by evoking a surface-erosion mechanism. Here we sought to determine the extent to which manipulation of chemical structure could be used to control release from hydrolytically degradable layer-by-layer films through modification of the degradable polycation. Toward this goal, films composed of poly(beta-amino ester)s, varying only in the choice of diacrylate monomer, and the model biological drug, dextran sulfate, were used to ascertain the role of alkyl chain length, steric hindrance, and hydrophobicity on release dynamics. Above a critical polycation hydrophobicity, as determined using octanol:water coefficients, the film becomes rapidly destabilized and quickly released its contents. These findings indicate that in these unique electrostatic assemblies, hydrolytic susceptibility is dependent not only on hydrophobicity but a complex balance between hydrophobic composition, charge density, and stability of electrostatic ion pairs. Computational determination of octanol:water coefficients allowed for the reliable prediction of release dynamics. The determination of a correlation between the octanol:water coefficient and release duration will enable advanced engineering to produce custom drug delivery systems.

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