Abstract

Liposomes are phospholipid-based self-assembled nanoparticles. Various components can be solubilized in the lipid bilayer, encapsulated in the aqueous core or attached to the surface, making liposomes attractive platforms for multimodality functionalization. Here we describe theranostic liposomes delivering a magnetic resonance contrast agent (lipid derivative of gadopentetic acid) and a hydrophobic photosensitizer (zinc phthalocyanine, ZnPc) for photodynamic therapy of cancer. For the first time, this theranostic system was prepared by the microfluidic method. Analogous formulations were produced by thin lipid film hydration (TLH) with down-sizing performed by extrusion for comparison purposes. We demonstrated double the loading capacity of ZnPc into liposomes made by microfluidics compared to TLH/extrusion. Microfluidics resulted in the theranostic nanoliposomes characterized by sizes =2.5x smaller than vesicles prepared by TLH/extrusion. Increased relaxivity was observed for liposomes manufactured by microfluidics compared to TLH, despite a slightly lower Gd chelate recovery. We attributed the improved relaxation to the increased surface area/volume ratio of vesicles and decreased phosphatidylcholine/ZnPc molar ratio, which affected water molecules' diffusion through the liposomal membrane. Finally, we showed photodynamic efficacy of ZnPc loaded into theranostic liposomes in head and neck cancer model, resulting in IC50 of 0.22 – 0.61 μM, depending on the formulation and cell line used.We demonstrate microfluidics' feasibility to be used for theranostic liposome manufacturing and co-entrapment of therapeutic and imaging components in a single-step process with a high yield.

Highlights

  • Liposomes are self-assembled systems composed of phospholipids forming bilayers [1]

  • It varied from ca. 45.9–83.1% in samples obtained by microfluidic methods (MM) and was lower for M3 and M4

  • zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) was loaded at a 2–3 times higher degree into theranostic liposomes prepared by microfluidics than those obtained by thin lipid film hydration (TLH)/ extrusion

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Summary

Introduction

There are several methods of liposome preparation allowing various scalability potential from the benchtop to the industrial scale. The most common liposome manufacturing method involves a lipid film formation and subsequent hydration of the film with an aqueous buffer [2]. This results in large and heterogeneous particles requiring the addition of a down-sizing technique such as extrusion or sonication [2]. We have recently demonstrated theranostic liposomes (named GdLip) containing lipid derivative of commercially available MRI CA, Magnevist® and a model photosensitizer zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) for photodynamic therapy (PDT), manufactured by TLH. Our research is focused on comparing vesicles prepared by TLH and microfluidics at different flow parameters (FRR, TFR)

Materials
Liposome preparation and characteristics
In vitro cellular experiments
Loading efficacy
Size and size distribution
Short-term stability
Cryo-TEM images
Relaxivity analysis
In vitro cellular study
Conclusions
Full Text
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