posted on 2020-08-24, 15:36authored byKarabi Roy, Gopal Pandit, Monikha Chetia, Ankan Kumar Sarkar, Sumit Chowdhuri, Anil P. Bidkar, Sunanda Chatterjee
A charged synthetic peptide-based
noncytotoxic hydrogelator was
employed in encapsulation, storage, and sustainable release of different
kinds of drugs, namely, ciprofloxacin (CP), an antibiotic; 5-fluorouracil
(5-FU), an anticancer drug and proteins like lysozyme and bovine serum
albumin (BSA). Hydrogelation of the peptide and its coassembly with
the drug molecules were studied to obtain mechanistic details. All
of the different cargos were capable of sustained and efficient release
from the delivery platform. The drugs were found to retain their activity
post release, while the proteins showed complete retention of their
secondary structure. While about 80% CP was released at physiological
pH over a period of 3 days, 5-FU was better released (73%) at an acidic
pH (5.5) in comparison to the physiological pH (68%). Lysozyme was
better released (82%) than BSA (43%) owing to the smaller size of
the former and negative charge on the latter. Such biocompatible multicargo-releasing
platforms from simple economically viable biomaterials, capable of
sustained and tissue-specific release of cargo, are extremely promising
in topical delivery of therapeutics.