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1.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 592: 271-278, 2021 Jun 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33662831

RESUMO

ZetaSpin determines zeta potential by measuring the streaming potential generated by rotating a disk-shaped sample about its axis while submerged in the liquid. The apparatus and procedure developed for ZetaSpin in aqueous solutions was adapted for use in highly nonpolar fluids like surfactant-doped alkanes. Perhaps most unexpected is the need for up to 10 min (instead of a fraction of one second for aqueous solutions) for the electrometer to display changes in streaming potential in response to changes in rotation speed. Four tests (suggested by theory) confirm that the potential finally reported by the electrometer was indeed the streaming potential. Compared to electrophoresis, ZetaSpin does not require a value for the Debye length, avoids the complication caused by the electric-field-dependence of electrophoretic mobility and can be used with planar samples as well as colloidal particles.

2.
Mol Pharm ; 17(11): 4302-4311, 2020 11 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33054234

RESUMO

Recently, protein therapeutics have gained significant attention as a result of their enhanced selectivity and diminished side effects compared to traditional small-molecule drugs. Despite their advantages, protein formulations typically suffer from stability issues because of aggregation and denaturation during production and storage, often resulting in detrimental immune responses. Surfactants can be used to stabilize and protect proteins in solution by preventing protein adsorption onto interfaces or by forming protective structures in solution. Herein, a detailed structure-activity relationship study is described, demonstrating the role that hydrophobic tail length plays in surfactant-mediated stabilization of the model therapeutic protein IgG. The FM1000 series, originating from a surfactant scaffold that allows for easy structure modulation, was synthesized by a simple 2-step procedure. First, phenylalanine was acylated with a variety of acyl chlorides of differing lengths to yield n-acyl phenylalanine, which was then coupled to Jeffamine M1000, a polyethylene glycol-based amine, to yield the final surfactant. With this FM1000 series, it was observed that the 14 carbon-long tail surfactant (14FM1000) was optimal at preventing IgG aggregation compared to surfactants with tails that were longer or shorter. Using a combination of dynamic surface tensiometry and quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation, it was hypothesized that 14FM1000 was able to prevent IgG adsorption, and therefore aggregation, by adsorbing appreciably onto surfaces quickly. 14FM1000 had the fastest rate of initial adsorption compared to the other surfactants studied. Short-tail surfactants were slow to and did not adsorb appreciably onto surfaces, allowing IgG adsorption. Although long-tail surfactants were also slow to adsorb, allowing IgG to adsorb and aggregate, their equilibrium adsorption was strong. Additionally, 14FM1000 was the most reversibly adsorbed surfactant, likely improving its ability to desorb and adsorb quickly to transient surfaces, therefore protecting the IgG at each new hydrophobic surface and preventing aggregation. By understanding the structure-activity relationship between surfactants and protein stabilization, we move toward more efficient design of future surfactants increasing the stability and utility of important protein therapeutics.


Assuntos
Anticorpos/química , Carbono/química , Composição de Medicamentos/métodos , Imunoglobulina G/química , Tensoativos/química , Tensoativos/farmacologia , Acilação , Adsorção/efeitos dos fármacos , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Fenilalanina/química , Polietilenoglicóis/química , Estabilidade Proteica/efeitos dos fármacos , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Propriedades de Superfície/efeitos dos fármacos , Tensoativos/síntese química
3.
Mol Pharm ; 16(1): 282-291, 2019 01 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30495962

RESUMO

To improve liquid formulation stability, formulators employ various excipients designed to stabilize protein drugs, including buffers, salts, sugars, and surfactants. One of the roles of surfactants is to protect the protein drug from surface interactions that can destabilize the protein. Protein drug products formulated with surfactants usually contain either a polysorbate or poloxamer. Even in the presence of these surfactants, protein drug stability is often insufficient, particularly because of agitation-induced aggregation. FM1000 is one of a series of surfactants containing an alkyl chain, an amino acid, and a polyetheramine. The characterization of the dynamics of FM1000 at various water/hydrophobic interfaces was compared to Polysorbate 20, Polysorbate 80, and Poloxamer 188. FM1000 stabilizes an interface 1-2 orders of magnitude faster than all three of these surfactants, even in the presence of protein. The faster dynamics leads to improved stabilization of model protein biologic drugs IgG and abatacept against agitation-induced aggregation. These results provide mechanistic understanding of the key causes and drivers of protein aggregation.


Assuntos
Composição de Medicamentos/métodos , Excipientes/química , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Imunoglobulina G/metabolismo , Poloxâmero/química , Polissorbatos/química , Estabilidade Proteica , Tensoativos/química
4.
Soft Matter ; 14(46): 9351-9360, 2018 Nov 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30457153

RESUMO

Electric fields can deform drops of fluid from their equilibrium shape, and induce breakup at sufficiently large field strengths. In this work, the electric field induced breakup of a squalane drop containing a colloidal suspension of carbon black particles with polyisobutylene succinimide (OLOA 11000) surfactant is studied. The drop is suspended in silicone oil. The breakup mode of a drop containing carbon black depends strongly on the suspension stability. It is observed that a drop of a stable suspension of carbon black has the same breakup mode as a drop with surfactant alone, i.e., without added carbon black. At lower electric fields, these drops break by the formation of lobes at the two ends of the drop; and at higher fields the homogeneous lobes break in a non-axisymmetric manner. However, a drop of an unstable suspension shows a drastically different breakup mode, and undergoes breakup much faster compared to a drop with surfactant alone. These drops elongate and form asymmetric lobes that develop into fingers and eventually disintegrate in an inhomogeneous, three-dimensional fashion. As a basis for comparison, the breakup of a pure squalane drop, and a squalane drop with equivalent surfactant concentrations but no carbon black particles is examined. Axisymmetric boundary integral computations are used to elucidate the mechanism of breakup. Our work demonstrates the impact of colloidal stability on the breakup of drops under an electric field. Colloidal stability on the time scale of drop deformation leads to rich and unexplored breakup phenomena.

5.
Adv Colloid Interface Sci ; 244: 21-35, 2017 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28073428

RESUMO

After presenting a brief historical overview of the classic contributions of Faraday, Arrhenius, Kohlrausch, Bjerrum, Debye, Hückel and Onsager to understanding the conductivity of true electrolytes in aqueous solutions, we present an in-depth review of the 1933 work of Fuoss & Kraus who explored the effect of the solvent on electrolyte dissociation equilibria in either polar or nonpolar media. Their theory predicts that the equilibrium constant for dissociation decays exponentially with the ratio of the Bjerrum length λB to the ion-pair size a. Fuoss & Kraus experimentally confirmed the dependence on λB of the solvent, while more recent experiments explored the dependence on a. We also present an in-depth review of the charge-fluctuation theory used to explain the sharp increase in conductivity with added water for water-in-oil microemulsions stabilized by ionic surfactants. Water swells the droplets making a greater fraction of them charged. At least for low-water content, the same exponential dependence on λB/a is predicted, provided a is chosen as the size of the polar core of the droplet or inverted micelle. Potential electrolytes like alcohols acquire charge by exchanging a proton. The dissociation equilibrium of the resulting ion-pair in mixtures of toluene and alcohol appears to be well modelled by the Fuoss theory. Solutions of inverted micelles are also thought to acquire charge by exchanging a small ion between two net-neutral micelles. Except for the dissociation of true electrolytes, all of the charging scenarios described above can be represented by a two-reaction sequence: 1) the disproportionation of charge between two neutral molecules, inverted micelles or droplets; followed by 2) the dissociation of the "ion"-pair intermediates. (The dissociation of true electrolytes involves only the second.) For each of the above charging theories, the extent of the second reaction decays exponentially with λB/a.

6.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 493: 265-274, 2017 05 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28110061

RESUMO

Development of an electrostatic stabilization mechanism for colloidal suspensions in nonpolar fluids requires an improved understanding of the interactions between the inverse micelles and particles as well as the roles that steric and electrostatic effects play. A droplet-based millifluidic device is designed and used to investigate the stabilization effects of surfactants on colloidal suspensions. A system containing carbon black and the surfactant OLOA 11000 suspended in dodecane is chosen as a well-characterized system to study sedimentation quantitatively. This device takes advantage of sub-millimeter optical path lengths to characterize sedimentation at concentrations at which sedimentation is not observable in the bulk and to achieve higher resolution in composition. A simple image analysis algorithm has been developed and applied to quantify sedimentation. Conductivity measurements using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) are coupled with the sedimentation experiments to identify the concentration ranges in which steric and electrostatic effects are dominant. A more gradual transition is observed than previously reported.

7.
Langmuir ; 32(13): 3095-9, 2016 Apr 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26974187

RESUMO

Amphiphilic Janus particles are currently receiving great attention as "solid surfactants". Previous studies have introduced such particles with a variety of shapes and functions, but there has so far been a strong emphasis on water-dispersible particles that mimic the molecular surfactants soluble in polar solvents. Here we present an example of lipophilic Janus particles which are selectively dispersible in very nonpolar solvents such as alkanes. Interfacial tension measurements between the alkane dispersions and pure water indicate that these particles do have interfacial activity, and like typical hydrophobic, nonionic surfactants, they do not partition to the aqueous bulk. We also show that the oil-borne particles, by retaining locally polar domains where charges can reside, generate electric conductivity in nonpolar liquids-another feature familiar from molecular surfactants and one commonly exploited to mitigate explosion hazards due to flow electrification during petroleum pumping and in the formulation of electronic inks.

8.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 469: 325-337, 2016 May 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26905337

RESUMO

The impedance of dodecane doped with sorbitan trioleate (Span 85), sorbitan monooleate (Span 80) and sorbitan monolaurate (Span 20) was measured as a function of frequency using a 10 mV amplitude sinusoidal voltage applied across a parallel plate cell with a 10 µm spacing. The tested solutions varied in concentration from 1 mM to 100 mM and the frequency range was 10(-2)-10(4) Hz. Nyquist plots of all three surfactants showed the high frequency semicircle characteristic of parallel resistance and capacitance but often exhibited a second semicircle at low frequencies which was attributed to charge adsorption and desorption. The electrical conductivity of each surfactant was proportional to surfactant concentration for concentrations above 10mM. Fitting the data to models for charge migration, differential capacitance, and adsorption allowed extraction of both charge concentration and two kinetic parameters that characterize the rate of adsorption and desorption. Above 10 mM the ratio of charge carriers per surfactant molecule was 22 ppm for Span 20, 3 ppm for Span 80, and 0.2 ppm for Span 85. A higher number of charge carriers per molecule of surfactant was associated with larger micelles. The adsorption rate constants were independent of surfactant concentration while the desorption rate constants were proportional to the surfactant concentration. This dependence indicated that uncharged surfactant, whether in micelles or not, participated in the desorption of charge. Predictions of the adsorption/desorption model for large constant electric fields agreed qualitatively with data from the literature (Karvar et al., 2014).

9.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 449: 2-12, 2015 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25315405

RESUMO

Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy in a thin cell (10 µm) was used to infer conductivity, permittivity and the differential double-layer capacitance of solutions of dodecane doped with OLOA 11000 [poly(isobutylene) succinimide] for concentrations of dopant between 0.1% and 10% by weight. All spectra (frequencies between 1 Hz and 100 kHz) were well fit by an equivalent circuit having four elements including a constant-phase element representing the double-layer capacitance. Using Gouy-Chapman theory for small zeta potentials and assuming univalent charge carriers, the double-layer capacitances were converted into charge carrier concentration which was found to be directly proportional to the weight percent of dopant with a 1 wt% solution having 87 carriers/µm(3) (the concentration of either positive or negative charges). This is only 17 ppm of the total monomer concentration calculated from the average molecule weight of the dopant. Dividing the measured conductivities by the charge carrier concentration, we inferred the mobility and hydrodynamic diameters for the charged micelles. The hydrodynamic diameters of carriers were significantly larger than the average diameter of all micelles measured independently by dynamic light scattering. This suggests that only large micelles become charged.

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